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Falz weighs in on the state of the country with 'Ole'

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Falz doesn't just make music, he documents history. Almost four years after his fiercely political track Yakubu, the award-winning rapper and activist has returned with a blazing new single titled Ole (the Yoruba word for "thief"). Serving as the lead single from his upcoming EP Break Time, this 2-minute-and-15-second onslaught is an unvarnished, high-stakes confrontation directed squarely at the political class over Nigeria’s worsening insecurity and economic hardship.

The production on Ole is intentionally minimal and steady, serving as a dark, heavy canvas that ensures Falz's razor-sharp lyricism remains the absolute center of gravity. The beat features a brooding minor-key sequence and tense percussion loops, creating an immense sense of urgency. This isn’t a song built for viral dance challenges or club rotations; it’s an intense, calculated street sermon that lets the rage and frustration of the everyday citizen do the heavy lifting.

Falz doesn't speak in riddles here, he names the crises directly. He raps passionately about rising inflation, the killing of security personnel, kidnappings, and leaders weaponizing tribal sentiments to buy "hungry votes" during election cycles. His flow is urgent, technical, and packed with an exhaustion that mirrors the collective psyche of the streets. While some critics may argue about commercial appeal, Ole stands out as a necessary, brave piece of social commentary, proving that Falz's role as the conscience of the culture remains entirely intact in 2026.

Listen to Ole here.

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