“Sare” lyrics by Simi
Here are the lyrics to “Sare” by Simi
Simi “Sare” lyrics
Gimme Gimme love
{Verse 1}
Oh no
I donât want to spend the night alone
Itâs so low (para)
Yolo
Anything I need I take am from my kolo
{Chorus}
Iâm getting money
Iâm getting lucky
I heard you calling
You’re up to Something
Gimme gimme gimme love
If you no get love, gimme chop
If you no get back, gimme front
Just gimme gimme gimme something
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare wa o
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare wa gba
{Verse 2}
Oh no
I donât want to miss a thing no no for more (para)
She say donât you keep me waiting o
Make me proud like papilo
Do it like a latino
Que eu reke tu se pas
{Chorus}
Iâm getting money
Iâm getting lucky
I hear you calling
You’re up to Something
Gimme gimme gimme love
If you no get love gimme chop
If you no get back gimme front
Just gimme gimme gimme something
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare wa o
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare
Sare sare sare wa gba
Sare wa gba
Gimme gimme gimme love
If you no get love gimme chop
If you no get back gimme front
Just gimme gimme gimme something
Gimme gimme gimme love
If you no get love gimme chop
If you no get back gimme front
Just gimme gimme gimme something
Simi sprinkled some “Niniola” vibes on “Sare” and it makes the song sound different when you listen to it.
The theme is uncommon, and if you don’t listen intently to the lyrics, you may not decipher easily that it’s Simi on the beat.
“Sare” focuses on a love story about attention. Simi claims she has her own money, because:
“Anything I need, I take from my kolo”
She demands attention from her lover because she wants him all the time. She wants something, anything from him that attaches her to him.
Significance
Simi’s “Sare” is hundred percent afrobeats. The lyrics and beats are traceable to the 90s where Nigerian women- or African women generally made a little money from their petty businesses.
This is why Simi says: “I’m getting money…I’m getting lucky”, but they don’t get enough attention from their husbands, and it is this kind of attention they demand from their husband.
The lyrics on “Sare” depict that the relationship is not entirely a love one. Rather, it’s more of attachment.
You don’t want just “anything” from somebody you love. You want everything from them. This is understandable because of the subduing conditions women had then and how they took whatever was given to them.
Review: Adekunle Goldâs âCatch me if you canâ could offer more
Flexibility
Simi goes all dexterous on “Sare“. She tweaks her own lyrics to make the song sound sizzling! She inserts tuneless lyricism to make the song even more interesting- which is the first time Simi would be doing something like this.
She even inserts some Spanish lyrics! Way to go!
Although “Sare” does not entirely match most of Simi’s songs, it is different.
It is characterized by a unique tune and glibs that makes it sound like Simi has sampled contemporary Afrobeats music continually and decided to leave the space of her low-key RNB to produce a timeless afrobeats song such as “Sare“.
Mixing and Production
Of course, Simi is a song engineer. “Sare” was ultimately produced. The beats are intriguing, and it makes “Sare” have the potential of being the soundtrack to a movie.
Delivery
Simi’s Delivery on “Sare” is commendable. She doesn’t over-do her vocals because she storytells a relationship that doesn’t exactly speak love, but attachment. Her delivery is cool and passionate enough.
Flaws
“Sare” sounds incomplete. For a song like this, Simi should have added at least one more verse since all the verses are in fact, short. It would have made “Sare” more intriguing.
Skiibii âBaddest boyâ ft Davido: What does the song need? {Review}
Rating
Delivery: 1.5/2
Mixing and Production: 1.7/2
Lyricism: 1.5/2
Relatability: 1.7/2
Replay value: 1.6/2
âTotal: 8/10
Go to home