Charge It
ENNY
ENNY delivers this with the casual authority of someone who has simply stopped explaining herself to people who don't deserve the effort. The production sits in that satisfying pocket of UK rap and R&B crossover — crisp snares, minimal but purposeful bass, arrangements that leave deliberate space for her voice to stretch out and settle. What makes it work is the texture of her delivery: conversational without being careless, confident without performing aggression. She speaks more than she sings, but the rhythm of her speech is so musical that the distinction dissolves. The song is essentially about accountability and self-worth — the refusal to absorb someone else's emotional debts — framed not as a wound but as a clear-eyed decision. There's no bitterness here, which is what makes it land so hard. The cultural positioning is distinctly British — Lagos-inflected, ends-rooted, but utterly contemporary London — and it arrives in a moment when UK female artists are rewriting what ambition sounds like. This is a driving-alone song, a getting-ready song, a song for the moment you stop waiting for an apology that was never coming.
medium
2020s
crisp, minimal, contemporary
UK, London — Lagos-inflected British
Hip-Hop, R&B. UK rap. confident, defiant. Begins with casual authority and sustains it throughout, arriving at empowered resolution without ever tipping into bitterness.. energy 6. medium. danceability 5. valence 7. vocals: conversational female rap, rhythmic spoken delivery, dry confidence. production: crisp snares, minimal bass, deliberate space, sparse arrangement. texture: crisp, minimal, contemporary. acousticness 2. era: 2020s. UK, London — Lagos-inflected British. Driving alone or getting ready when you've finally stopped waiting for an apology that was never coming.