Welcome to the GRAMMY/Recording Academy recognised online platform known for global music discovery Dismiss

Skip to content
-
Subscribe to our newsletter & never miss our best posts. Subscribe Now!
GRUNGECAKE logo GRUNGECAKE

Global media brand for music, art & real stories

GRUNGECAKE logo GRUNGECAKE

Global media brand for music, art & real stories

  • Home
  • Distribution Plus
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Press
  • Home
  • Distribution Plus
  • About
    • Advertise
    • Press
Close

Search

  • https://www.facebook.com/
  • https://twitter.com/
  • https://t.me/
  • https://www.instagram.com/
  • https://youtube.com/
Subscribe

Ayra Starr joins Africa Now Radio with Nandi Madida on Apple Music 1 to discuss new album

By GRUNGECAKE
May 31, 2024 3 Min Read

[media-credit name=”Photo: Courtesy of the publicist” width=1000 align=”center”][/media-credit]

Nigerian Afropop singer-songwriter Ayra Starr joins Nandi Madida via FaceTime on Apple Music 1 to talk about her latest single, the GIVEON collaboration ‘Last Heartbreak Song’. She also discusses her new album, ‘The Year I Turned 21,’ how she subverts expectations, her distinct voice, and more of her favourite collaborations from the album.


Ayra Starr tells Apple Music how she subverts expectations

I always try to surprise even myself, with my moves, to be honest. It can be annoying, because everybody’s like, “Ayra, we expect you to go this way,” but I get bored very easily, and I hate being perceived in a way that people think they know my next move. It’s chess for me; I always want to try something different.

Ayra Starr tells Apple Music about developing her distinctive voice

I’ve always had the voice I have now—even my talking voice would be very deep as a child. When I was in the choir, my choirmaster couldn’t believe my voice was like that. He’d tell me, “You’re a lady! Try to sing in soprano.” I was like, “What?! I can’t sing in soprano—this is my voice!” It’s been[an] on-and-off thing, but I’ve always known my voice and the sound of it has always been unique.

Ayra Starr tells Apple Music about her Asake collaboration, ‘Goodbye (Warm Up)’

I was in the studio with [producer] P2J. He was like, “I have this song; I don’t know if you’re going to like it,” because he’d had it for a long time and he [wasn’t] sure about it. Every time I hear somebody say they’re not sure about a song, I just automatically love the song, because it feels like a challenge—if you don’t like it, I’m gonna make you love this song.

I was obsessed with this song. I remember I travelled to Zimbabwe the next day [after recording], and I was playing it everywhere. Everywhere I went, I was listening to it. This was even before Asake’s verse. Asake’s verse made it so perfect.

Ayra Starr Tells Apple Music about her Anitta and Coco Jones collaboration, ‘Woman Commando’

‘Woman Commando’ is one of my favourite tracks that I’ve ever made. The energy of it—it feels influenced by every African genre I grew up listening to. I remember when I first made this song in the studio, I was like, “I want two other girls on this song, because I don’t want to be the only one saying ‘Woman Commando’. I want three young women just killing it.”

I already had Coco Jones’ verse—I sent Coco an R&B track and she said, “Ayra… I want to be on your vibe.” Say less! I sent her the [‘Woman Commando’] track; Coco sent me a verse in a week and I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. She held her own so much, like she didn’t feel the need to come into my vibe. She just held her own American beauty, she was just so amazing on that track. Anitta was the last verse of the album to come in. When it came in I was like, “Thank god, guys. I’ve blown! I’ve made it.”

Ayra Starr tells Apple Music about her GIVEON collaboration, ‘Last Heartbreak Song’

That song is so perfect. One of the songs that I’ve made that I’m just so proud of. You know me and GIVEON were talking about it and we were like, “This song is giving melancholy, but at the same time it’s giving like… I’ll be good.” It’s also kind of inspiring, even though it’s so sad and sombre. It feels good to love somebody and somebody loves you back, but this feels one-sided now… you know, it’s so heartbreaking but it’s so inspiring because it’s fine—I’ll be better on my own. I’ll be good. I feel like GIVEON’s verse—I couldn’t have got a more perfect verse. When I heard it, I was crying. I was in the car and I couldn’t believe what I was listening to. I had to re-record my verse, because he ate too much!


Tags:

Africa Now RadioApple MusicAyra StarrNandi Madida
Author

GRUNGECAKE

The world's leading platform for global music news & discovery.

Follow Me
Other Articles
Previous

Song of the Day: ‘Space & Time’ by Amber Mark

Next

Roddy Ricch battles with ‘Survivor’s Remorse’ over the Turbo-produced track: Listen

No Comment! Be the first one.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement

Recent Stories

  • Ghanaian artist EL sings about everyday plight of his people on ‘Noko Fio (Money Dey Talk)’: Listen
  • ‘The Rolling Loud Movie’ sets nationwide theatrical release for this Fall
  • Watch Nigerian artist FAVE’s bootylicious visual for ‘Cold Outside’, produced by Dre Skull
  • From N-POP to A-POP: Tyla’s album and Africa’s global Pop rise
  • Introducing N-POP: A new path for African music

Playlist

GRUNGECAKE

GRUNGECAKE is a globally-recognised multimedia brand with over 20 years of documenting and shaping global music culture. About GRUNGECAKE

Subscribe

ICYMI: British-Sudanese artist @_Elmiene_ announces ‘Sounds for Someone’ headline tour https://t.co/wEp9NO1J6j pic.twitter.com/Zck3O4X9V1

— GRUNGECAKE (@GRUNGECAKE) January 27, 2026

My first digital issue featuring rising star @firstklaz_ is out now; you can download it from the homepage of https://t.co/3KoEpWa5pk 🫶🏽 #GRUNGECAKEAFRICA pic.twitter.com/r7KAECH2Rw

— Richardine “The American” Bartee (@THEYAMS) July 30, 2024
    Copyright 2007-2026 — GRUNGECAKE INC ™ • All rights reserved