
Omaye’s story is marked by loss and grit. In 2013, when he was five, he lost his mother. That kind of absence doesn’t wait for childhood to finish. It changes the daily rhythm, the safety nets, the small comforts. He had to learn self-reliance far earlier than most kids ever should.
Still, he didn’t let that grief become the only headline. Omaye turned it into fuel. He began writing from the life he was living, treating music as a place to put feelings he couldn’t carry around all day, and as a way to keep going. Determination and need pushed him to leave his father’s home. He made an 85 mile journey on foot to reach his grandmother and his aunties in Abuja, chasing a future he could build. Abuja has been home since.
“Tell Them,” which he describes as his first professionally recorded single, gets straight to the point. It runs for 2 minutes and 17 seconds, and that tight runtime works in its favor. The song feels edited with care, like Omaye knows the exact parts of the story he wants to underline. Nothing lingers too long. Each moment lands, then moves.
The heart of the track is self belief, delivered without theatrics. Omaye is singing from lived reality: resilience, work ethic, and the refusal to be dismissed. The takeaway is simple and sturdy. Give everything you have, trust the process, and let the results do the talking. He isn’t pleading for approval. He sounds like someone who has made peace with the grind, and is waiting for timing to catch up.
The production supports that calm confidence. Built on an Afrobeats foundation, “Tell Them” brings in subtle, bubbling Amapiano synths that keep the beat moving without crowding it. There’s air in the instrumental, a controlled spaciousness that leaves room for his voice. Omaye’s delivery is smooth and composed, floating over the rhythm with a polish that suggests he’s been working longer than his years might imply.
What really makes “Tell Them” stick is its restraint. Instead of reaching for extra drama, Omaye leans into honesty and lets that carry the hook. The song is immediately catchy, but the deeper pull is its emotional clarity. You can hear ambition, but you can also hear discipline and belief, the quiet kind that comes from experience rather than hype.
Taken together, the track reads like a foundation stone. Omaye doesn’t sound like he’s scrambling for trends. He sounds like he’s laying down a base he can build on. “Tell Them” feels like a checkpoint in a longer run, a first flag planted by an artist thinking beyond the next upload. If you move between Afrobeats, Amapiano, and Hip-Hop, it’s an easy record to slot into your rotation, because the emotion matches the groove.
Now streaming on Apple Music, “Tell Them” plays like momentum you can hear. As Omaye keeps tightening his craft, the direction is getting harder to miss. He’s moving with purpose, and sooner or later the wider world is going to catch up.
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