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Gyakie – Hallelujah

Gyakie - Hallelujah

Gyakie – Hallelujah

Gyakie “Hallelujah”: Faith and Closure on After Midnight

Gyakie’s “Hallelujah” closes After Midnight as track 17, and it’s the album’s spiritual exhale. Built around soft gospel-tinged production, gentle percussion, and Sosawavegod’s understated arrangement, the song sits in that space between prayer and personal affirmation.

The production stays warm and minimal, letting Gyakie’s voice lead without overproduction. There’s no heavy bounce or dramatic shift. The beat feels steady and reverent, giving her room to move between praise, encouragement, and reflection. It sounds like the moment after the questions in “Is It Worth It?” when you land on gratitude and resolve.

Lyrically, “Hallelujah” is rooted in faith and encouragement. Gyakie opens with “Prase God Hallelujah / Hallelujah, Hallelujah, Halle” and weaves in lines about purpose, perseverance, and trusting the process. “Rome wasn’t built in a day / So pick up your tools and build right from scratch” and “You will run, you will not be weary / You will walk, you will not faint” turn the song into both a personal prayer and a message to the listener. It’s not preachy. It’s grounding, like a reminder that the work and the waiting have meaning.

On After Midnight, the track works as the perfect closer. The album moves from late-night reflection, heartbreak, and doubt to celebration and questioning, and ends here with surrender and strength. It ties back to Gyakie’s family tradition of prayer after midnight, which she’s said shaped the album’s title and mood. After 16 tracks of vulnerability and growth, “Hallelujah” feels like dawn breaking.

For listeners who’ve followed Gyakie since “Forever,” this song shows how her artistry has deepened. She’s not just singing about love and loss anymore. She’s singing about faith, identity, and the quiet strength that gets you through. It’s not built for charts or virality, but it’s the kind of closer that leaves you sitting still after the album ends.

If you’re listening to After Midnight front to back, “Hallelujah” is where Gyakie brings it full circle. It’s a thanksgiving, a benediction, and a reminder that becoming takes time, but it’s worth it.

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