
There are a lot of songs… songs which fit the Shuffle playlist, and songs which stand the test of time. It is evident that Offei’s “Let It Go” has imprints on immortality spreading all over it. The anticipation that laid the carpet for this release isn’t a wasteful chant. When GroundUp dropped the live session of this magical piece, the cyber streets went wild, begging to quench their musical thirst. No surprise #LetItGo trended for 2 days straight and landed publications in Graphic Showbiz and Ghana Today.
Offei, the final year Medical Laboratory Sciences student tells the story of many. Inspired by a true story of his own, Offei emotionally sings about a situation whereby a guy opens up his heart in the depths of love, but the lady turns blind to it. Entangled in the love web, he tries to stick around in the hope of what the future holds, but the lady leaves him in wait of rain in the middle of a desert. He finally decides to let go with an imperfect smile.
Kofi Genfi, a US-based poet breathes more life into the music with his Spoken Word verse. The instrumental, rich of acoustic guitar, piano fills and everything in between, to bring out the human characteristic of the listener was produced by Qwesi King. “Great song by all standards” is a cliché.
This is the SoundCloud link of the song
[https://soundcloud.com/offeimusic/let-it-go-prod-by-qwesi-king/s-QFYua]


Anti-LGBTQ Bill is duly passed, I believe it is too late in the day to reverse i...
Here are areas to face power outages over maintenance works today
RNAQ ex-wife petitions court to restrict Hajia4Reall’s closeness to her children...
One dead, two children trapped after three storey building collapse at Adenta
Obuasi Circuit Court jails farmer 8years over violent mining site attack at Obua...
Health Minister summons KATH CEO over emergency centre closure
Unauthorised structures demolished at Haatso
Fire guts shops opposite Accra Central Police Station
Stephen Yeboah appointed new registrar of Sunyani Technical University
Abandoned 250-bed Sewua Regional Hospital rots as KATH battles congestion
