[6] An essential part of his music-making journey which influences his African and international motifs stems from Yoruba culture and from a musical household that favoured the rich mix tunes of 1960s, 1970s and 1980s.
"Gonto", which he said was inspired by the actions of Nigerian youths during the End SARS protest, was later accompanied with a music video, which starred some of Nollywood actors and actresses, and was short lived on stage at Terra Kulture in Lagos, Nigeria.
Business Day in Nigeria described POST-19 as "Ibejii's hyperbolic emotional encounter with lockdown and its offerings which meanders through the innocence and transition of time, life and love and also highlights other issues".
[28] A listening party was held for the album at Ikoyi, Lagos State which welcomed guests like Motolani Alake, and Brand Ambassador at Diageo, Tinya Alonge.
His style has been described by The Guardian and Vanguard as eclectic, poet, thinker, and a storyteller who uses folklore, metaphor and vernacular to clothe his music and deliver in a unique and sensitive manner, exploring traditional Yoruba folk, Jazz, Dance, RnB, and Juju.
[35][8] In 2021, The Native magazine described "Gonto" as "a candid but soulful rebuke of the casual insensitivity of governments across the world in the wake of the tragedies of 2021 as well as a celebration of a new age of awakening, and Intermission as "a project about finding hope and exhilaration even in the strangest of places".