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Narrated byBlaqbonez

Everlasting Taker

Blaqbonez

Initially, “Consistency” was kind of like the intro. And when I made “Everlasting Taker,” it was crazy. The way it

sounded, it was an intro. As soon as you get into a project, it sounds like the right thing to hear first. It had the

first bar and all the affirmations, I felt like, what’s wrong with having two intros? So “Everlasting Taker” and

“Consistency” paired together is one introduction. Making “Everlasting Taker” was straightforward. As soon as the

producer played me the beat, I started writing it right there. We weren’t even in a studio; we were in a room, and he

was just playing me beats. It’s very interesting because Ragee specifically told me that he had something for me on that

album, because I thought I was almost done with it. He was like, “Bro, I have something for you on that album.” He was

the one always saying, “I dey on heat,” and I was like, “Make we hear.” He played that beat, and I immediately started

writing the verse. I recorded it later that evening.

By:ayomidetayoo

•Narrator: Artist

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Narrated byA-Q

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A-Q, Blaqbonez

Blaqbonez always wanted me to make a song that will go super viral. He’s like; “oh, you need to make

a record that will cement your legacy, a song that many Nigerians will know, will listen to”. So

when I was making God's Engineering 2 (previous album), we made ‘Family’. It didn't go as viral as

he wanted it to go. So when I was making God's Engineering 3, he was paying special interest in the

recording process. When I made the song called ‘Read the Signs’ with Terry Apala, Blaq was super

excited. He even helped me contact Terry to be on the record. He was like; “yo, this is the record.

You finally did it your way. You just have to put a budget behind this record, and it's going to go

super viral”. I was like, cool. It's supposed to be the single anyway. But then I told him that I'm

not going to make the album without him doing a verse. I wanted a rap verse. So before I wrapped up

the album, I called him and I was like, yo, I'm wrapping up the album and I need that verse. And he

was like, say less. I think two days later, I just got an email and he had recorded on a YouTube

beat. I listened to the verse and the hook and I was like, Oh, is this how you're feeling? He was

like, yeah, a lot had happened before he recorded the verse. He put down how he felt about what was

happening. I was like, okay, I jumped into the booth and dropped my own verse in like, maybe like

15, 20 minutes. But I held it back because I was still not certain because it was on a YouTube beat.

We sent it to a producer called Jxses. He was able to make a beat that matched what we were already

feeling - which is one of the hardest things to do. We didn't think of it as a single, right? We

just wanted it to be on the project. After I finished the album, I played it for my team and they

were like, yo, it's hard - and this should be the single. They were like, the hook, the chemistry,

everything is just a safer bet. And I spoke to the guys on the distribution side, and they were

like, yeah, they actually think that the song with Blaqbonez is the single. So we picked a date. And

we dropped it. The situation between Blaq and Modu (ODUMODUBLVCK), everything just escalated it. And

yeah, that's how the song came about. We were not in the same studio when we made the record. Blaq

recorded his part, sent it to me. I recorded my part, sent it to him. And people have been saying

that that's one of my best verses yet. That thing that Blaqbonez wanted me to always have, “I want

you to have this to cement your legacy”. I always wanted him to be the person that would give that

to me. I guess he finally did it on this record.

By:MemoriesFM

•Narrator: Artist
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