Timeless resonance defines Lolo Vandal’s Remarkable Meditation, an album that echoes across Xhosa hip‑hop and beyond.


Posted March 25, 2026 by LoloVandal

Remarkable Meditation is Lolo Vandal’s album‑length manifesto; melding spiritual reflection, social commentary, and Xhosa hip‑hop energy to mark his rise from the underground to national prominence.

 
South African rapper Lolo Vandal announced Remarkable Meditation in 2014, a project that would come to define his artistic trajectory and help shape the contours of Xhosa hip‑hop. More than a conventional album, the record presented itself as a spiritual and creative manifesto, an extended meditation on identity, resilience, and long‑term vision that marked a decisive moment in his career.

Remarkable Meditation signalled Lolo’s move from the underground into national visibility, with several tracks debuting on influential platforms such as Channel O and Yfm. The project demonstrated that he could command mainstream attention without diluting the authenticity that underpins his sound, proving both commercial viability and artistic integrity.

The album opens with “Ingoma Yam,” a deeply personal pledge in which Lolo treats his craft as a responsibility to be nurtured like a child. That ethic of stewardship, of growth, accountability, and service to community, runs through the record, linking introspective reflections with pointed social commentary. Across the tracklist, he balances inward-looking moments with songs that address collective concerns and civic memory.

“Amandla” emerged as one of the album’s most powerful statements after its Channel O debut, its themes of empowerment and resistance resonating with listeners confronting social and political challenges. “Akhonto,” which premiered on Yfm, showcased Lolo’s ability to pair incisive lyricism with broad appeal, bridging the divide between underground credibility and mainstream recognition.

The album’s emotional range is wide. “Mandela” functions as a tribute to freedom and the sacrifices that secure it, while “Till I Die” reads as a vow of permanence, an artist’s commitment to music as a lifelong calling. Tracks such as “Imithandazo” and “Mabaphinde Bacinge” reveal a contemplative, spiritual side, exploring prayer, resilience, and the inner work required during hardship. Together, these songs form a mosaic of personal struggle, communal memory, and aspirational purpose.

Released at a pivotal moment just before Lolo’s relocation to Gauteng, Remarkable Meditation captured a period of transition. The album served as both mirror and compass as he negotiated the gap between the life he imagined and the life he lived. It became a tool for reconstruction and redirection, less a commercial product than a map for redefining his path as an artist and a spiritual being intent on building a legacy.

Years on, the record retains its relevance. Its themes of struggle, freedom, and perseverance continue to resonate across generations, and the combination of evocative artwork, purposeful production, and lyrical depth has secured its place as a cultural artefact. Remarkable Meditation stands as evidence that artistry rooted in truth and vision can outlast trends and continue to inspire.

For Lolo Vandal, the album was more than a release, it was a declaration that his voice, his craft, and his vision would endure.
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Categories Arts
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Last Updated March 25, 2026