Men cautioned of seductive women in ‘Sizinantole’
Reviewed by Precious Msosa
While some people were still welcoming the year 2026 and eventually working on the subsequent New Year resolutions, which to some (especially men) included revisiting their love journey, then boom – a new hit song titled Sizinantole also kissed the sound waves.
For the men who had been flattered by gold-diggers in the year 2025 and beyond, the song must have resonated well with them and it is of no doubt that they instantly fell in love with it. Apart from the song being loved by those that might have been tricked by the women, the track by Malonie Kyz, generally appeals to all men as it cautions them of the tricksters that some women have become of late.
Actually, it is of no surprise that the song has become the ‘national anthem’ in most entertainment joints with several men requesting a replay. One would actually notice the delight that most men finds in the song from the mere nodding of their heads to singing along especially the hook.

Malonie Kyz: Artist behind the song (Photo Credit: Internet)
It is this large following of the song that saw it hitting over 1.5 million views on YouTube barely a month of the music video’s release. Expectedly, most of these views were from men who were commending the artist for reflecting on an issue that ‘bites’ them the most.
In the opening stanza, the artist starts by wondering of the situation in which a woman deliberately storms from the blues and starts seducing the man. …kodi ndiye chikatere? Wachita kundikoka wekha ndigwere, ndigwereemo, ukundiyang’ana chotere bwaanji? Nde ndili ndi zokamba umvere, nde khala umvere… (What’s this? You have deliberately lured me into the trap, so I get caught, why are you looking at me like this? I have something to say, so stay around and listen). The message which he then shoots in the follow up line is that of a man madly in love such that he wants to spend the night with the woman.
But it is the next verse that captures it all; wachita kudutsa dala, ukudziwa ndiku halla, kali moyo ngati sikadwala, ine moyo ngati wa misala, somebody get me an ofesala, zomwe kakuchita aka, utha kupezeka zoti wafupa gule asanavine wamva iwee. (You deliberately passes by, knowing I will definitely stop you, she appears as if she doesn’t get sick, for me am like a mad person, may someone get me a police officer, you may end up spending on a dancer who hasn’t even danced). Then the song goes into the hook where a man bluntly sums up the lady as someone who just wants to dig into the man’s pockets and then walks away… (sizinantole, undikolole, ine ndiduke kenako iwe usowenso).
Generally, the above narration in the song is where the artist sends the warning shots to his fellow men that they need to be more careful in their sojourns as there are a lot of ladies who are out to just drain your pockets. The song clearly narrates how these ‘sizinantoles’ would come the men’s way. They already know the weaknesses of men such that they have all the tricks in the book of how to con men.
So, to my fellow men, let’s watch out for the ‘sizinantoles’.
