- Under Pressure Part 2 (music Video) | Ras Kimono
He sings of people with "no food in their belly" and "no money in their pocket," highlighting the basic deprivation that persists across generations.
"" by the late Nigerian reggae legend Ras Kimono is more than just a music video; it is a searing social document that remains hauntingly relevant decades after its release. While the original "Under Pressure" (1989) introduced the world to Kimono's potent blend of roots reggae and Patois-infused social commentary, Part 2 serves as a deepened, visceral expansion on the struggles of the common person in Nigeria and beyond. A Timeless Social Critique Ras Kimono - Under Pressure Part 2 (Music Video)
Though deeply rooted in the Nigerian experience, the lyrics emphasize that this "pressure" is global, explicitly calling out how "Black and White," "Europeans," and "Africans" are all caught in the same cycle of suffering. He sings of people with "no food in
Recent retrospective reviews from platforms like TikTok and Instagram note that the video feels like it was "made for today," reflecting a cyclical history of economic and political hardship in Nigeria. Visual and Artistic Impact A Timeless Social Critique Though deeply rooted in
The music video, available on the Ras Kimono Official YouTube Channel , employs a gritty, documentary-style aesthetic that matches the song's "Rub-a-Dub" master energy: