
On The Follow Up, the West African-born rapper is not interested in polishing old victories or circling familiar ground. He treats the 14-track project like someone still in motion, still testing himself, still carrying the weight of what it took to get this far. The record is rooted in resilience, ambition, and the hard refusal to fold when life keeps offering reasons to stop.
Born in Freetown, Sierra Leone, and raised between Canada and Philadelphia, LiMM brings several worlds into his music. That lived range gives The Follow Up its restless momentum. Whether he is celebrating progress, confronting disappointment, or pushing through doubt, the album carries the sense of an artist moving toward something larger than the moment in front of him.
Its clearest statement may be “Ritual,” a track released ahead of the project that has already drawn hundreds of thousands of streams. The appeal is easy to hear. LiMM sounds focused and charged, pairing sharp ambition with the hunger that runs through much of the album. When he raps, “I went another route, I had to find my way,” the line lands like a personal code rather than a casual boast. The song gives shape to the mindset behind the full project, showing the discipline underneath the confidence.
Where “Ritual” leans into certainty, “Push Me to the Edge” exposes the strain beneath it. Behind the luxury references and triumphant pulse is an artist sorting through betrayal, pressure, and frustration. Lines like “No weapons gon prosper up against me” and “Some niggas did me dirty had to cut ’em off” make the song one of the album’s more revealing moments. It points to a recurring idea across The Follow Up, that growth can demand distance from the people who once stood close.
Elsewhere, “Ghost,” “Who I Am,” and “Regardless” sharpen the album’s unapologetic drive. “Do It Right” brings patience into the picture, while “Too Lit” gives the record a burst of celebration without disconnecting from the struggle behind it. Even “Beast Mode,” “Hyper,” “Runner,” “Let It Go,” “To The Head,” and the closing “Sacrifices” feel tied to the same larger arc of persistence, discipline, and self-reinvention.
The Follow Up works because LiMM never pretends every obstacle is behind him. He sounds like an artist still meeting them directly, with enough scars to know what progress costs. The album presents success as a daily choice, a decision to keep moving even when the path stays heavy. Stream The Follow Up on your favorite platform!
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