Asake and DJ Snake didn’t come together to make a dance hit they made something deeper with Worship.
The record leans heavily into spiritual reflection and street-rooted storytelling, with Asake centering the message around gratitude, faith, and the journey from struggle to success. Throughout the song, he repeatedly acknowledges God, using phrases like “Alhamdulillah” to emphasize that his rise isn’t luck, but divine alignment and consistency.
Instead of the high-tempo festival energy many would expect from DJ Snake, the production sits in a more grounded space blending Afrobeats, street-pop, and subtle global elements without overpowering the message. The sound is intentional: it carries weight, not just rhythm.
Asake stays in his lane lyrically talking directly to the streets, to believers, and to anyone chasing something bigger. There’s a strong sense of identity in the record: hustle, faith, and self-belief all tied together. It feels less like a performance and more like a testimony.
What makes “Worship” stand out is that it doesn’t try to cross over by losing its core. Instead, it expands outward while staying rooted. DJ Snake adapts to Asake’s world rather than the other way around, allowing the track to breathe in its own authenticity.
In a time where many collaborations are built for charts, “Worship” feels like it was built for meaning. And that’s what gives it staying power.

