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From Moniker to Manifestation: The Man Who Sang M$NEY

  • Writer: Jesujoba Ojelabi
    Jesujoba Ojelabi
  • May 17
  • 3 min read

It is just past midnight, and the DJ seems determined to earn every naira tonight. Then, from deep inside the ecstasy, the hook lunges at you and you finally see it:


“Forgiveness, forgiveness

Father, forgive me for the bad, bad things wey I don do, do

Consistency, consistency

I promise to remain consistent in my positive version.”


To layer his introspection over Magicsticks’ masterful amapiano production feels so intentional that one begins to suspect Asake is fully aware of the contradictions he is staging: a room of people seeking out their vices singing heartily a song seeking forgiveness.



Asake’s fourth LP, M$NEY, arrived in May 2026 amid immense anticipation. After the mixed reactions that trailed Lungu Boy, his third album, and the earlier collaborative EP with Wizkid, this project carried unusual weight. Early reactions have described M$NEY as Asake’s latest adventure in his passionate quest to defeat poverty, a framing that feels particularly apt given his long-held adoption of the “Mr Money” moniker, itself drawn from the 1999 Nollywood classic. Yet beyond the immediate reviews, many of which rightly focus on sonic experimentation and lyrical texture, fewer critics have paused to situate M$NEY within the broader thematic arc of Asake’s discography. That may be where the album’s true significance lies.


M$NEY feels like confirmation. It is the sound of an aspiration so deeply pursued that it has transformed from desire into destiny. If Mr Money once represented longing, M$NEY represents attainment. This thematic progression is scattered deliberately across the album.

On “Worship,” Asake declares:


“Forget all your loss, something must go before something come

It is work, no be luck

Seeing is believing, you have to trust yourself

And wait for result.”


This is not merely motivational rhetoric; it is a philosophy of transactional sacrifice, the creed of someone who sees prosperity not just as a miracle but as a consequence.

On “Gratitude,” when he proclaims, “Mo ṣ'oriire meje-meje,” he invokes abundance in its completeness. In Yoruba symbolic imagination, seven often gestures toward spiritual wholeness, perfected arrival. Asake is not merely saying he has made it. He might be suggesting that his blessings have reached sacred proportions. “Rora” advocates composure in wealth, a call for calm stewardship rather than reckless display, while “Amen” extends the vision beyond personal success into generational ambition.


Even when romance attempts to soften the album’s edges on Wa, Asake refuses to let listeners forget the central thesis. “MCBH” (“Money Can’t Buy Happiness”) subtly reinforces the idea of abundance. Money may not buy happiness, but Asake makes it clear that scarcity is no longer his burden.


This is what makes “Forgiveness” such a fascinating pivot. Here, amid wealth’s bravado, Asake pauses to ask for absolution, promising consistency in his “positive version.” The line raises an intriguing question: what exactly is the negative version? Is this repentance for past desperation, creative errors, or acknowledgement of the moral compromises often attached to ambition, or simply a superstar’s awareness of his own excess?


Perhaps the answer is intentionally elusive.


If M$NEY has a definitive triumph, it is the reunion with Magicsticks. Their chemistry remains one of contemporary Afrobeats’ most reliable formulas, and despite pockets of initial backlash, the album carries undeniable energy. Some songs steal hearts immediately; others will sediment into public affection over time. This has always been one of Magicsticks’ quiet strengths: creating magic that somehow sticks.


Ololade Asake was introduction, Mr Money With The Vibe was a proper entrance into the mainstream Afrobeats conversation. Work of Art explored range, ambition, and the artist’s desire for canon beyond bangers. Lungu Boy felt like globalisation, a Lagos Islander making skating a lifestyle. M$NEY is comparatively narrower in artistic breadth. It thrives more as a mood, a statement, a declaration of status.


And perhaps that is precisely the point. Mr Money is no longer just an aspiration; the man now has money.

 

 
 
 

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