For an artist whose music has always balanced vulnerability with rhythm, the next chapter for Omah Lay feels both intimate and expansive. The GRAMMY-nominated Afro-fusion star has officially announced his highly anticipated sophomore album, Clarity of Mind, arriving April 3 — a project that signals a deeper, more reflective phase in his evolving artistry.
The announcement arrives on the heels of Omah Lay’s appearance at the Grammy Awards, where he earned a nomination alongside Davido for Best African Music Performance for their collaboration “With You.” The moment marked another milestone for the Port Harcourt-born singer whose sound has steadily reshaped the global conversation around contemporary African music.
But rather than reveal the album through traditional promotion, Omah Lay chose something far more immersive.
In the weeks leading up to the announcement, he quietly hosted underground, rave-style listening sessions in Berlin and Amsterdam, inviting fans into the emotional world of the project before its official release. The Berlin event unfolded inside a cavernous warehouse, where flashing lights, echoing basslines, and late-night energy transformed the space into something closer to a collective experience than a standard listening party.
Earlier that evening, a small group gathered at a restaurant for a private album playback. From there, Omah Lay personally selected about twenty fans to join him for a second, more intimate moment back at the warehouse. What followed became one of the most talked-about visuals surrounding the album’s reveal.
Surrounded by fans, he unveiled a dramatic new look — shaving his hair and tattooing his head — while filming the announcement trailer for Clarity of Mind. In the final visual, the industrial setting, pulsing lights, and small circle of supporters blur the line between artist and audience. Several Berlin fans appear directly in the trailer, transforming them from spectators into part of the moment itself.
The atmosphere captured in that video mirrors the emotional intensity shaping the album.
Earlier this year, Omah Lay released the project’s haunting lead single, “DON’T LOVE ME,” a dark and seductive track that explores vulnerability, emotional distance, and the complexities of intimacy. Floating over elastic basslines, shadowy synths, and hypnotic percussion, the record captures a conflicted mindset — one that craves connection while resisting its emotional weight.
At its center is a stark refrain: “Don’t love me. Just make love.” The line becomes both confession and defense, encapsulating the tension between desire and self-protection that runs through the song.
The accompanying visual deepens that emotional landscape. Shot with a moody, cinematic tone, the video unfolds in dreamlike spaces filled with soft light, shadows, and fluid movement. The imagery balances intimacy with isolation, portraying romance as something fleeting — beautiful yet unstable.
“DON’T LOVE ME” follows the success of his single “Waist,” a record that blended spiritual reflection with romantic temptation while gaining traction across Africa, the United Kingdom, and Europe. Its Paris-shot video hinted at Omah Lay’s growing fascination with visual storytelling, where atmosphere and imagery carry as much meaning as lyrics themselves.
Before this recent creative surge, his last solo release was 2024’s “Moving,” a standout record praised by The New York Times and later remixed by Haitian DJ Francis Mercier. His expanding sonic universe has also included collaborations with global voices such as Tems, Myke Towers, SPINALL, Tyla, and Kehlani.
Meanwhile, his Boy Alone (Deluxe) era — which included a remix of viral hit “soso” featuring Ozuna — has surpassed 600 million global streams, further cementing Omah Lay as one of the most influential voices shaping the sound of modern Afro-fusion.
With Clarity of Mind, however, the artist appears to be moving beyond momentum and into something more introspective.
It is a new era defined not only by bold creative risks, but by emotional honesty — a project that reflects growth, love, and the ongoing process of self-discovery. For the global community that has embraced his music, the album promises a deeper connection with an artist who has never been afraid to let listeners inside his thoughts.
And if the energy of those late-night warehouse gatherings is any indication, Clarity of Mind may be Omah Lay’s most immersive chapter yet.