Wizkid’s Son, Champz, Steps Into Music With a Sound That’s Entirely His Own

Wizkid's Son Bolu Makes Music Debut with Champion's Arrival EP

In the Nigerian music ecosystem, lineage can be both a blessing and a burden. For artists descending from global icons, the weight of expectation can be suffocating. That is the reality facing Champz, the teenage son of Afrobeats superstar Wizkid. But with the arrival of his debut EP, Champion’s Arrival, the young artist is proving that legacy does not have to be a limitation.

At just 14, Champz is stepping into the limelight with a bold creative identity that stands in complete contrast to the silky Afrobeats melodies and breezy rhythms that defined his father’s prevailing sound. Instead of leaning into the Starboy formula, he pivots sharply toward a more introspective, stylish, and lyrically driven brand of rap — one that reflects the preoccupations, fantasies, and curiosities of a teenager trying to understand the world and himself.

Rather than delivering the next “Ojuelegba,” Champz is interested in crafting something more personal, more atmospheric, and more reflective. His EP explores themes far beyond romance or street bravado. He reaches for existential questions, self-definition, rebellion, fantasy, and ambition — themes that reveal a young artist trying to claim space in an industry that already made room for him through his father, but which he insists on entering through his own door.

The EP opens with a confident statement of intent. The track positions Champz as a narrator steeped in cinematic imagery, drawing inspiration from fictional gangsters and the mythologies of pop culture. The opening line — “Say hello to my little friend / My nigga call me Al Pacino ’cause I’m really him” — immediately situates him in the universe of tough-guy bravado, a world built from film references, rap legends, and youthful imagination.

In referencing Al Pacino’s unforgettable portrayal of Tony Montana, Champz leans into the fantasy and theatricality of gangster storytelling — not as a lived reality, but as an archetype of independence, strength, and agency. It’s a performance, a persona, and a metaphor all at once.

That theme is reinforced as he references 50 Cent, an artist whose early years were shaped by survival, transformation, and a relentless hustle. But Champz’s fascination with these archetypes is less about crime and more about the mythology of resilience, status, rebellion, and self-determination. Through these references, he constructs his own narrative: that of a dream-chaser determined to succeed on his own terms.

One standout verse — “I ain’t Jesus Christ, but don’t say my name in vain” — shows a surprising command of metaphor and self-mythology for someone so young. It captures the tension between humility and ego, between earnestness and bravado, between the expectations placed on him and the persona he’s crafting.

Có thể là hình ảnh về một hoặc nhiều người và kính mắt

Despite the gritty aesthetic of some of his bars, Champz ultimately reveals a youthful sincerity. He raps about wanting to “put his mom in a Lambo,” a line that grounds the entire EP in genuine ambition and familial devotion. In that moment, the tough exterior melts into something undeniably human — the universal teenage desire to make one’s family proud.

Musically, the EP leans into a modern, crisp, minimalist rap style. There are hints of contemporary American trap, UK undertones, and the textured introspection of SoundCloud-era rap. But everything is filtered through the mind of a teenager trying to shape his identity in real time. The beats are bold, the flows youthful but determined, and the lyricism surprisingly sophisticated for an artist at the beginning of his journey.

Where Wizkid pioneered a smooth, melodic, genre-bending Afrobeats sound, Champz is pulling from an entirely different lineage. His work feels more aligned with digital-native rap culture — street references, existential questions, cinematic imagery, and punchline-heavy bars. It’s a striking deviation, and perhaps the most important part of his artistic emergence.

In an industry where nepotism discourse is loud and often unforgiving, Champz’s approach feels refreshing. He is not chasing comparisons with his father; he is distancing himself from them with intention. For a young artist, that takes confidence. For the son of a global star, it takes courage.

Wizkid's Son Makes Music that's Nothing Like His Dad's

Champion’s Arrival is not a finished portrait — it’s a sketch, a glimpse, a promising introduction. But what it reveals is exciting: a young artist with a clear point of view, a deep well of influences, and the resolve to step out of a very large shadow.

Whether he maintains this direction or evolves into something entirely different, one thing is clear: Champz is not following a blueprint. He is drafting his own.