Limoblaze - Two Lyrics

Album: Two - Single
Released: 10 Feb 2023
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Lyrics

Oh my daddy
This your love dey make me happy
Type of love wey dey chase me
E don follow me go Cincinnati
When I been dey for Agege
This your love don dey follow me tey tey
Tell (?) say na my daddy dey run the party

Hmm
E follow me everywhere
Nobody wey fit koba me
Even times when I dey sleep my daddy still dey cover me
And no be my first rodeo
Shey you no see my portfolio?
London to Tokyo
Revival go happen for radio

Video

Limoblaze - Two (Official Audio)

Thumbnail for Two video

Meaning & Inspiration

I’ve been sitting here thinking about that line where he talks about God’s love following him all the way from Agege to Cincinnati. It’s funny how a song can just stop you in your tracks like that, making you think about how we talk about God being everywhere. It’s that old thought from Psalm 139, isn’t it? That idea that there really isn’t a place you can go where you can hide from Him, or more importantly, where you can lose His presence. I guess that’s what Limoblaze is getting at when he says the love follows him. It’s comforting, but it also makes me wonder if I really live like I believe that. Most days I feel like I have to carry myself, but then I hear someone singing about their Daddy covering them while they sleep, and it feels like a genuine, lived-out version of what it means to be kept by someone bigger than you.

There’s this casual confidence in how he talks about God, like he’s just chatting with a friend. Some people might find that a bit too bold, maybe even risky, but isn’t that the whole point of being adopted into a family? He mentions God running the party, which feels a bit light, but then he brings it back to God being the one who covers him even when he’s just sleeping and not doing anything to earn it. It makes me think of those verses about how He neither slumbers nor sleeps. It’s one thing to read that in a book, but when it’s wrapped up in a rhythm like this, it feels different. I’m still wrestling with whether my own walk feels that secure, or if I’m just trying to perform my way through the day. Sometimes the simplicity of the lyrics makes me pause because I’m so used to overcomplicating everything, wondering if I’m doing enough, when maybe the actual truth is just that constant, unearned presence he’s singing about. It’s strange how a simple line about a portfolio can make you check your own heart for whether you’re leaning on your own work or just trusting in that covering he’s talking about.

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