Not many recommendations I can offer you in lighting a fish-only tank, other than -
LESS.
Whaa....?!!
Without plants to power up with a required intensity and spectrum of lighting, the only real goal of aquarium lighting will be to provide a suitable source of light to help you maintain the tank in cleaning, maintenance, etc.... and to make the fish look good.
So, to that end...
Almost ALL fish-only tanks out there are just
VASTLY over-lit. Most fish in general, and Cichlids in particular, prefer lighting in the aquarium that is - DIM. Lighting conditions that are just dark and kind of soothing. There is a reason that most of the activity and business going on in a Cichlid-only tank happens after lights out. So, I would recommend getting pretty cheap stuff to light an African Mbuna tank. Nothing that elaborate. One of my favorite lighting 'systems' for an aquarium was with two, hang-on-wall halogen track lights mounted above a 55 gallon aquarium. I placed floating, silk 'lily pads' in the tank to move around in the current, and the tank and fish under that lighting just looked incredible under those moving shadows! It was kind of a dark and spooky look, and the Cichlids really seemed to like it.

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I CAN offer you some specific recommendations on placing Live Aquatic Plants in the aquarium though.
DON'T. Your herbivorous Mbuna may be inclined to look at even tough Anubias types as a sort of all-you-can salad bar or something. And even worse, if you don't have enough plants in there to support each other (go all out?), they WILL eventually be overcome by the Algae Monster and die. The choice to go with Live Aquatic Plants in an aquarium is best described by the old saying,
'GO BIG, OR GO HOME'.