
J Nas Beatz throws down the gauntlet with “Twasa Drill,” a cypher-style posse cut that stitches together some of Liberian rap most commanding voices. Stone Pee, Dj Sama, Mark Doe, Nikey 20, Spankey Span, and Barsee Mocopala Kiloda all step up, and the record feels less like a feature list and more like a summit. J Nas sets the tone with a dark, sliding bass and catchy piano stabs, but leaves room for each MC to bring their own flavor — from Stone Pee’s gruff punchlines to Barsee’s animated street bars and Spankey Span’s unfiltered energy. It’s raw, competitive, and built for the trenches.
What makes “Twasa Drill” stand out is the chemistry amid the chaos. Dj Sama and Mark Doe trade cadences that bounce between Koloqua and English, while Nikey 20 drops quotables that cut through the mix with sharp delivery. J Nas Beatz keeps the beat menacing but uncluttered, letting vocal tone and wordplay carry the weight. This isn’t drill chasing London or New York — it’s Monrovia stamping its own code on the sound. For fans tracking the evolution of Lib rap, “Twasa Drill” is a bar-heavy, statement record that proves the scene has depth and range. “Twasa” is culture and a lifestyle.
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