Last Last Burna | Boy
"Last Last" did more than just top charts; it cemented Afrobeats' seat at the head of the global pop table. It proved that African artists don't need to change their sound to win—they just need to tell their truth.
The song popularized the Nigerian slang which refers to a breakup (as in, "everyone will eventually be served breakfast"). By turning heartbreak into a collective experience—something we all go through—he turned a sad topic into a celebratory chant. It shifted the vibe from "pity me" to "we’re all in this together." 4. Directing His Own Story Last Last Burna Boy
Years later, when that beat drops, the energy in the room still shifts. Because at the end of the day, we’ve all had our "breakfast," and we’ve all needed a song to help us through it. "Last Last" did more than just top charts;
The backbone of "Last Last" is a clever sample of By tapping into early-2000s nostalgia, Burna Boy bridged the gap between classic American R&B and modern Afrobeats. It gave the song an instant sense of familiarity that made it accessible to listeners who might have been new to the genre. 2. Radical Vulnerability Because at the end of the day, we’ve
When Burna Boy dropped in May 2022, it wasn’t just another Afro-fusion track; it was a cultural reset. Whether you were in a club in Lagos, a lounge in London, or stuck in traffic in New York, the Toni Braxton-sampled melody was inescapable.
The music video, which Burna Boy directed himself, offered a fly-on-the-wall look at his life. Filmed at his home and featuring his real friends, it felt authentic. It wasn't over-produced; it was a victory lap that felt earned, proving that he could turn personal "shambles" into a professional masterpiece. The Verdict