Rapper T-Rex Jr balances faith and survival in debut album
Friday, March 06, 2026
T Rex Jr

There is a type of album that grows with you. The first listen feels fresh; the second reveals intention. By the time you reach the final track, you realise the entire project has been one long, controlled exhale.

T To The Racks, a 12-song debut album by T‑Rex Jr released on February 13, is exactly that kind of body of work. It sounds confident on the surface, but underneath lies tension, vulnerability, and a quiet spiritual war unfolding.

Rwandan rapper T Rex Jr just released his debut album T To The Racks. Photo courtesy

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The title T To The Racks immediately works on multiple levels. "T” refers to Tyrannosaurus Rex, one of the deadliest creatures to walk the earth. "Rex” means king, while "racks” points to money, the bag, and ambition.

It is some double entendre, but also a statement of identity: power, survival and the pursuit of success all exist within the same frame. From the outset, Rex presents himself as someone striving to become something greater—not just financially, but spiritually and mentally.

One of the album’s strongest themes is responsibility.

In "No Misses,” he raps about how success is not simply about winning, but about obligation. In "Bigger Than Me,” Rex pays tribute to the people who believed in him. The "bag” is not only personal gain; it represents trust and the expectations of those who stood by him.

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Throughout the album, a recurring idea emerges: people doubted him, restrained him, and now his return comes with pressure.

Biblical imagery appears deliberately across the project. References to Samson, Cain and Abel and Daniel—particularly in "Part O Me”—frame Rex’s journey as a spiritual battle.

Yet this is not preaching. Instead, it feels more like confession. Rex wrestles with staying righteous, staying focused, and remaining true to himself while chasing his dreams. The struggle is both internal and external, and that tension gives the album emotional weight.

Military language also runs throughout the record. Rex frequently raps about soldiers, battlefields, a one-man army and ranked commanders. References to "Afande Winyenyeri” and star-ranking imagery reinforce ideas of discipline and endurance.

Being in a soldier’s shoes means pushing forward without applause. It means structure. It means sacrifice. The battlefield becomes a metaphor for Kigali’s hustle and the grind of being an independent creative.

Perhaps the most relatable element of T To The Racks is how Rex balances revelation with restraint.

He hints at depression, identity crises, heartbreak and past experiences he cannot fully expose. Yet he never loses composure; instead, he carefully controls the narrative.

"Soprano” captures this contrast perfectly. It sounds like an aggressive hype track, yet its lyrics speak about survival and invisible battles. The vulnerability is present, but subtle.

The album also moves fluidly across cultural references—from Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to Cristiano Ronaldo, Zinedine Zidane, IShowSpeed, Ja Morant, Bruce Lee and the anime character Naruto Uzumaki.

According to Rex, Bruce Lee represents discipline and strategy, while Ronaldo symbolises relentless self-improvement. Each reference connects back to the album’s central ideas: growth, mastery and endurance.

Behind the music lies the reality of 9-to-5 jobs, high living costs, self-funding projects and building a career in a scene that is still growing globally. That context makes the album feel grounded and relatable—something many creatives grapple with.

The title may sound bold, even boastful. But each track quietly documents the bills—not just financial ones, but emotional and spiritual ones: lost sleep, sacrificed peace and years of effort.

T To The Racks ultimately sounds like an artist who has been preparing for this moment for a long time—betting on himself, enduring the grind and building layer by layer.