Tony Dayimane Reveals Single Life Struggles Delayed Final Track On “Girls & MP3’s”

Tony Dayimane Reveals Single Life Struggles Delayed Final Track on “Girls & MP3’s.” Durban’s rising hip-hop star Tony Dayimane just dropped the kind of behind-the-scenes confession fans live for, straight from an Instagram Q&A that is already doing numbers.

In a sun-drenched photo posted yesterday, the Girls & MP3’s EP creator is kicked back on the grass in jeans and a white tee, big smile on his face, hands clapped together like he is still celebrating the fact that the album is finally out. Above the chill snap, he answered a fan’s burning question: Which song took the longest to make on “Girls & MP3’s”?
His reply? Pure honesty with a side of laughter.
“It was the last one I finished cause I’m not dating anybody, so there was no inspo at all. Thought about thinking of past relationships, but that didn’t work, bangicika-bonke. Had to ask my friends about their relationship for inspo to be able to write.”

Translation for the non-slang speakers: the man was stuck. No current girlfriend, no fresh butterflies, and even raiding the memory bank of exes left him drawing blanks. “Bangicika-bonke” – that classic South African way of saying every single one of them hit a wall – had him turning to his squad for second-hand love stories just to finish the track.
The five-track EP, which dropped on February 13, 2026, has been on a tear, racking up over 1.5 million Spotify streams in its first 12 days alone. From the smooth opener “Yano Star” to the feature-heavy “Asiyeke” with Sjava and the reflective closer “Where Would I Be,” the project is soaked in the very romance Tony says he was missing while writing its toughest cut “Woza.”
Yet here is the beautiful irony: the song that gave him the most grief is the one that ended up proving his point. Sometimes the best art does not come from the fairy-tale romance. It comes from the very lack of it, plus a little help from the group chat.




