O’Kenneth Ft. Jay Bahd, Skyface SDW x Chicogod – Hopez MP3
It’s 2AM in Kumasi. The streets are quiet, but inside a small studio in Asakaa, 4 voices are fighting the same battle.
O’Kenneth walks in first. He’s been up all night watching the opps move and the police patrol. He steps to the mic with that fire: “We no get breaks, so we get hopez.” One bar and the room catches energy.
Jay Bahd follows. He switches the mood. Where Kenn is anger, Jay brings melody and memory — talking about his mama’s prayers, empty pockets, but full heart. He reminds everyone why they started.
Then Skyface SDW enters dark. His voice is low, like someone who’s seen too much. He paints the pressure: snitches, fake friends, bullets that don’t ask names. But he ends every line with “we still dey here.”
Chicogod closes it. He doesn’t rap, he testifies. Punchlines like hammer blows. “Kumasi to the world” isn’t a slogan here — it’s a promise. When he finishes, the 4 of them nod. No extra words needed. Asakaa spoke.
Hopez was born that night. Not in a label boardroom. In a hot room with no AC, 4 brothers betting everything on hope because breaks weren’t an option.
Sound & Vibe
Distorted 808s shake the walls. Eerie piano plays like warning sirens. Drill hi-hats move fast like heartbeats under pressure. UK drill bones, but the blood is pure Kumasi.
Why It Hits
1. 4 voices, 1 struggle: Each verse is a different chapter of the same street book
2. Anthem energy: Hook “We get hopez, no breaks” becomes a chant for anyone grinding from zero
3. No industry polish: Just 4 Asakaa boys telling truth over a hard beat
Hopez isn’t just a song. It’s Kumasi documenting itself before the world catches up.



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