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R.B.D Release 5th Studio Project "Living Isn’t Enough"
By Hiphop Africa
Published on 16/03/2026 13:20 • Updated 16/03/2026 14:11
Music

Living Isn’t Enough is a conceptual EP that explores the psychological cost of modern survival,  the quiet negotiations people make with themselves just to keep functioning.

Across seven tracks, the project moves through themes of ambition, emotional fatigue, demanding  clients, temptation, and the recurring dread that accompanies the daily grind. 

One of the album’s recurring motifs is a fictional character known as “Serial Client” representing  the frustrating realities behind professional life; underpaying yet demanding clients whose  presence reflects the chaos behind otherwise orderly routines. 

Rather than presenting isolated songs, Living Isn’t Enough is designed as a front-to-back listening  experience, using narrative skits, conversational moments, and thematic transitions to immerse  listeners in the internal world of the artist. 

The project balances lyrical precision with musical restraint, emphasizing mood, storytelling, and  emotional authenticity.  

ABOUT 

R.B.D. is a Ghanaian afro hip-hop artist and practicing lawyer whose music sits at the intersection  of sharp lyricism, dark storytelling, and lived experience. Originally known as Rude Boy D, he first built a reputation for his technical rap style during his  high school years at Adisadel College, where his performances earned him early recognition  among peers. 

After graduating, he stepped away from music for five years to pursue an LLB degree and legal  training, eventually returning to music in 2021 after being called to the Ghanaian Bar. Since then, R.B.D. has used his catalogue as a form of audio journaling, documenting the tension  between professional life, creative ambition, and the psychological realities of modern survival. 

His music often blends personal reflection with social commentary, tackling themes such as  pressure, identity conflict, addiction, ambition, and emotional fatigue. Stylistically, R.B.D. draws inspiration from lyricists such as Royce Da 5’9, Eminem, Crooked I,  J. Cole, Kendrick Lamar, Big Sean, and Ghanaian hip-hop pioneers including Sarkodie, E.L., Lil  Shaker and Ko-Jo Cue. 

While rooted firmly in hip-hop, his work increasingly explores the edges of the genre through  conceptual songwriting and cinematic sequencing. 

 

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