Logan currently shows no signs of slowing down after "Dem Nah Bad" and "Authentic Style", he continues this healthy stream of music with the assertive, "Move From We".
Assisted by a Rakjay (@RakjayUK) production, the track begins with an infamous Wiley sample before the Willesden Green MC introduces his familiar Jamaican style with the chorus. The instrumental, full of a trumpet-sounding melody, thick bass and reverberated cymbals, even incorporates Bach's legendary "Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565" as a break. Over this spellbinding mix, we hear Logan touch on trendsetting, the grind, falsities in music and pop style dons.
Assisted by a Rakjay (@RakjayUK) production, the track begins with an infamous Wiley sample before the Willesden Green MC introduces his familiar Jamaican style with the chorus. The instrumental, full of a trumpet-sounding melody, thick bass and reverberated cymbals, even incorporates Bach's legendary "Toccata and Fugue in D minor, BWV 565" as a break. Over this spellbinding mix, we hear Logan touch on trendsetting, the grind, falsities in music and pop style dons.
The joint ends with a comical but informative interview from Jammer and DJ Argue, that everyone should have seen by now. With this, it's potentially clear what Logan is getting at - he's making grime, he is a grime artist and he wants 'genre-hopping', inauthentic grime characters to Move From We.
View the old school visuals below and check the latest from Logan (@logan_olm) on Twitter.