u/Flimsy04

Inayah making music for the girls who miss old school R&B

I can’t even explain it properly but this is exactly how sampling should be done to me. It still gives you that nostalgic feeling from the original, but it doesn’t sound lazy or like she’s depending on people recognising the sample to carry the song. Inayah actually made it feel like her own record and that’s why it works so well.

u/Flimsy04 — 2 hours ago

[REQUEST] Is there any other R&B artists out rn that sound similar to Inayah??

I've been listening to her music for a while now but there's just something about her voice that is addictive - Was just wondering if there's any other artists that can scratch the same itch...

youtube.com
u/Flimsy04 — 3 hours ago
▲ 0 r/Nigeria+2 crossposts

Blaqbonez deserves to be in the conversation for Nigeria’s best artist right now

I still think people underrate how complete Blaqbonez is as an artist. He can make fun records, introspective songs, experimental tracks and still keep a strong identity through all of it. A lot of artists can’t do that consistently.

u/Flimsy04 — 1 day ago

Blaqbonez might genuinely be Afrobeats’ brightest rising star right now

At this point it feels like Blaqbonez has outgrown the “underrated” label. The consistency, personality and ability to stand out without copying what everyone else is doing makes him feel like one of the most interesting artists coming out of Nigeria right now.

u/Flimsy04 — 1 day ago

Inayah’s “For The Streets” Deserves Bigger R&B Conversations

I found Inayah through “For The Streets” a while ago and ever since then I’ve felt like she has one of those voices that instantly stands out. The way she approached the Fantasia inspiration felt genuine instead of forced, which is probably why the song stuck with me for so long. I recently saw she’s releasing a new project called ‘Therapy Wasn’t Enough’ on June 5th and honestly it feels like the kind of release r&b needs right now.

youtube.com
u/Flimsy04 — 1 day ago
▲ 288 r/rnb+1 crossposts

this Inayah clip just reminded me how much i miss REAL r&b

I’ve been listening to this artist Inayah a lot recently and it’s just something about her vocals. I feel like 2026 is finally starting to bring real R&B back into the mainstream and she genuinely needs to be included in that conversation moving forward. Fantasia is NOT an easy artist to replicate either but she makes it look effortless while still putting her own spin on it.

u/Flimsy04 — 1 day ago

It's great to see the youth defending Christianity! UK rapper DC3 is refreshing, may he continue to use his talents to glorify Christ and reach the next generation

He is absolutely right about people feeling comfortable disrespecting Christianity compared to other faiths. We all deserve equal respect!!

u/Flimsy04 — 8 days ago
▲ 53 r/ukdrill

DC3 is too cold 🥶 one of the most interesting rappers out right now

The originator of this content style, he deserves his flowers

u/Flimsy04 — 8 days ago
▲ 7 r/Tyla

"How you say you love me? You ain't put me in CHANEL" - TYLA has been eating it up lately with her hit song CHANEL. It's got me wondering if CHANEL has become the new artist's favourite brand? It seems the days of Gucci, Prada or LV are gone and people want CHANEL now?

CHANEL by Lil Baby and Gunna is a huge hit. Blaqbonez has a song called CHANEL. Other honourable mentions are obviously Frank Ocean - Chanel.

Do you think this has always been the case or is there a shift happening? Genuinely curious...

Given the influence of artists, I'm keen to discuss if this is a recent movement and if songs can genuinely have an impact on the fashion world?

What are your thoughts guys?

CHANEL - TYLA

BLAQBONEZ - CHANEL

reddit.com
u/Flimsy04 — 23 days ago
▲ 3 r/chanel

"How you say you love me? You ain't put me in CHANEL" - Anyone who's been out recently or listens to the radio has probably heard Tyla's hit song CHANEL. It's got me wondering if CHANEL has become the new artist's favourite brand? It seems the days of Gucci, Prada or LV are gone and people want CHANEL now?

Blaqbonez has a song called CHANEL. Other honourable mentions are CHANEL by Lil Baby and Gunna.

Do you think this has always been the case or is there a shift happening? Genuinely curious...

Given the influence of artists, I'm keen to discuss if this is a recent movement and songs can genuinely have an impact on the fashion world?

What are your thoughts guys?

TYLA - CHANEL

BLAQBONEZ - CHANEL

reddit.com
u/Flimsy04 — 23 days ago