TeeJay Brags About His Badness In New Single ‘Trigga Finga’: Listen

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TeeJay

Dancehall vocalist TeeJay released his new single Trigga Finga on Tuesday, May 26 on his official YouTube page. The Up Top Boss throws down some ruthless rhymes on the soulful Forex Riddim for an easy musical slaying.

It seems like he’s been walking a dark path with some of his latest songs, Better Them Than Me, Bing Bing, Guard Ring and Expensive Style for example, all have the same kind of smooth dishing of vicious words.

Here we are again and without skipping a beat, Trigga Finga gets right into battle. TeeJay sings “Please don’t cry for me, if tomorrow me RIP. Mi nuh tink uno love war like me, try diss mi a road and not pon IG.” He then calls out his rival for being a big talker, “boy say dem a go kill man and cya do it all now… boy swear say him a murderer, true him and him fren dem deh a road and nuh stop shoot the sky. ”

The small details add an element of realness, leaving folks to think his words are directly targeted, but he is yet to call a name. It’s all getting a little old with the subliminal references in his songs.

Now the Up Top Boss is baiting someone to diss him in person and not on Instagram, we know he’s been pushing a battle with Alkaline, and the Champion Boy deejay did in fact blow up TeeJay’s spot on the social media platform recently. However, if this is a comeback, it’s rather delayed and in that case weak.

This could all be talk nonetheless, a strategic plot to bragger his own badness. TeeJay is a master at creating gangster style rhymes the gruesome parings, Trigger Finga is just one of his many singles to demonstrate this.

The deejay says, “Trigger finger ever got a bad habit, rifle dat a lift. Roll up a dem ends, man panic, chop off head, put it pon a stick…. Man open people face still yuh look inside of it, marrow fly like a witch.”

More bloodshed follows and name dropping the guns he uses to execute them, check out the official audio below. Trigga Finga was created on the Forex Riddim, produced by Jones Ave and distributed by Johnny Wonder.