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Ase Odin Celebrates Community and Culture With His Single “We Got This”

  • Writer: BUZZMUSIC
    BUZZMUSIC
  • 9 hours ago
  • 2 min read
Man in black t-shirt with a thoughtful pose against a plain background. Partial text on shirt: "Bob Marley Hope Road." Calm mood.

Ase Odin is a Nigerian-born artist turning community into sound. His latest track, “We Got This,” is an upbeat, afrobeats-inspired anthem rooted in culture, unity, and collective energy, all filtered through the shared identity of the Seattle Seahawks. At its core, the song is about what happens when fans, players, and culture collide and actually show up for each other.


Featuring THEO MA1 and Gravelly, “We Got This” blends hip-hop verses with afrobeats rhythms, reflecting Ase’s wide-ranging musical fluency. The result feels communal by design, not branding. That energy carries straight into the visuals, with the music video filmed at Lumen Field, where the Seahawks play. The setting wasn’t just symbolic; it was participatory.


While filming, passersby stopped, watched, and asked to be part of the moment. Instead of shutting it down, Ase leaned into it. The song is about shared experience, and the video became exactly that. Conversations sparked organically, stories were exchanged, and the sense of camaraderie that defines Seahawks culture played out in real time.


Music has always been woven into Ase’s life. Some of his earliest memories are of watching his father practice, absorbing rhythm before he understood structure. Though school in Washington state eventually took priority, Nigerian music never left him. The COVID shutdown became the turning point, giving him space to reconnect with his roots and fully return to music.


Nigerian music, he explains, is where he learned the fundamentals. As a kid, instruments were built from whatever was available, but the rhythm always came through. Today, while the tools have changed, the foundation hasn’t. That emotional weight, the cultural imprint, still shapes every song he makes.


Community isn’t a theme for Ase, it’s the framework. His music is conversational and intentional, built to be felt rather than consumed passively. Through deliberate harmony choices and chord progressions, he creates space for listeners to reflect, respond, and connect.


Clarity is the goal. He wants listeners to know the music is made with them in mind, not above them or at a distance. That sense of relatability is only going to deepen with the music he plans to release this year.


Ase is preparing to explore global realities head-on, touching on war, social injustice, love, and joy, without flattening any of it. Sonically, he’s moving across genres, from love ballads and reggae to rock, hip-hop, and afrobeats. What stays consistent is the storytelling and emotional honesty, rooted in everyday life.


His message is simple but intentional: you are not alone. Shared experience has power, and movement comes from collective emotion. That philosophy is embedded in “We Got This,” a title that sums up Ase Odin’s musical and moral compass.


By centering connection over spectacle, Ase isn’t just making songs. He’s building conversations and inviting people into them, one track at a time.

 
 
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