Nine years of music, made quietly, carried by a voice learning its own weight.
Omega Bebesa — born Omega Peace Mikuti — has been making music in Malawi for close to a decade before most ears noticed. Raised in a church household by spiritual-leader parents, music was ministry and expression before it was career. Two words she still refuses to separate.
Her sound sits where Amapiano's log-drum pulse meets Afro-fusion texture, and her voice lives inside the song rather than over it — whispered delivery, commanding emotional weight. She writes what she lives: love, growth, self-awareness, heartbreak, and the quiet work of coming back to herself.
Her 2026 EP, Bruised but Breathing, produced by Sir Odilo Enterprises (SOE), is the clearest statement of that yet — four songs about return, not recovery. They sit beside a catalogue that reaches back to 2017: Good Times, Ndadziwa, Ndikondweleko, the 2025 singles Dekha and Ndachila, and background vocals on Driemo's Tsamba (from The Magician, 2025).
In 2025 she was named Artist of the Month by Alembanji Magazine, and she performed a 50-minute set on the Elikiva Stage at the Tumaini Festival — Malawi's headline arts festival, held in the Dzaleka community under the theme Rising With Resilience. As her TikTok audience crosses continents and her catalogue compounds, she is not chasing noise.
She is making songs for people who feel loudly and live quietly — and that is starting to find an audience on every continent it reaches.