Review: Omah Lay Embraces Healing and Self on “Clarity of Mind” Album
His sophomore album “Clarity of Mind” feels like the next chapter, and a deliberate evolution born from stepping away from the spotlight to confront himself.
Omah Lay, born Omah Stanley Didia, has always stood apart in Afrobeats as a storyteller who leans into the raw edges of feeling rather than glossing them over. From his early breakthroughs with Get Layd and “What Have We Done” to the defining statement of Boy Alone, he built a reputation for turning personal ache into something universally resonant. His sophomore album “Clarity of Mind” feels like the next chapter, and a deliberate evolution born from stepping away from the spotlight to confront himself.
The singer from Port Harcourt built his name on honesty. “Get Layd”, “What Have We Done”, and then “Boy Alone” in 2022 all painted a picture of someone going through it in real time, wanting love, running from it, feeling lost, admitting it. His fans did not just listen to those projects. They saw themselves in them. So, going into this album, the question was not whether he could still write. It was whether he had grown, and whether the music would show it.
“Clarity of Mind” answers that in its own way. There are no big announcements or feel-good moments here. What you get instead is a man in the middle of figuring himself out, and he lets you sit with him while he does it. He stepped away for a while, from the road, from the noise, from being "Omah Lay" for everyone else. What he came back with feels less like an album made to impress and more like one made to understand. The audience just gets to watch. The production makes that clear from the very first seconds.
“Artificial Happiness" opens with strings building slowly, almost like a warning, before a sharp kick pattern cuts through and pulls everything back to earth. Staccato synth plucks and soft key chords carry the melody, while a restless bass guitar moves underneath, never fully settling. Omah's voice comes in clean and steady - confident without being loud. What is interesting is how he creates different emotional zones within the song, shifting his cadence and vocal tone where another artist might just switch between a verse and a chorus. By the outro, the clean structure falls apart - strings wail, his voice gets warped and buried in effects — and the song ends in controlled chaos. It works precisely because it was not supposed to feel comfortable.
"Jah Jah Knows" follows, and here the shake in his voice becomes the whole point. The Afroswing rhythm holds everything together - heavy kicks, restless shakers - but what you feel is the weight in every line, notes stretched just past where they should stop, like the feeling behind them is too big for the melody to hold. The chorus lands hard in how plain it is: "I don't know what to do with my life / Everything I been know before, you can see me I don't know no more." No decoration, no poetry tricks, just the honest thing said out loud. The strings swell during the hook like they are feeling it too. The song ends scattered, bird sounds, digital noise, smeared vocals, falling apart rather than stopping cleanly.
The middle of the album is where the full range of the project shows itself. "Canada Breeze" slows everything down and strips away the urgency. Bluegrass and dusty Western-style guitar lines hang over a grounded rhythm while Omah settles into his lower register, sounding almost unbothered. Substance comes up again here, but not as an escape, more like a tool, a way of staying level: "I breathe Canada breeze and grow spiritually / Nothing dey bother me." The distance in his delivery feels earned, not forced. "Water Spirit" then shifts into desire and physical wanting, but without any warmth or softness. His voice is almost flat, describing rather than feeling, and the group vocals and ululations in the chorus turn the whole thing into something close to a ritual, dark underneath its surface.
"Don't Love Me" sits with that same emotional shutdown, built on an unusual drum arrangement, agogos, cowbells, bongos all locking together, while Omah maps out a version of himself so numb that even his usual escapes have stopped working: "Hennessy no dey hit me again / Igbo no dey high me again." It is one of the quietest gut punches on the album, thrown without any build-up, which is exactly why it lands.
The arrival of Elmah on "Coping Mechanism" feels like a window opening in a room that had been shut too long. Her voice, warm, high, full of feeling, brings a kind of simple care that the album had kept at arm's length. More importantly, her presence seems to bring something out of Omah, too. He softens. The walls come down a little, and what is left sounds genuinely tired rather than stylishly weary: "Unhappiness is hurting me / I can't feel my shoulders anymore / Is it cuz I carry all the load." This is the moment the album turns, where the accounting begins.
The second half of the record trades open confession for texture and feel. "Julia" hides Omah's voice inside the production, heavily treated, more like a colour than a lead vocal, while the instrumental runs on buzzing synth bass and those dusty Western guitars. The emotional truth is still there, but you have to reach for it. A line about preferring to be alone slips past almost before you catch it. "Waist" is the album's most enjoyable stretch, ukulele plucks opening into punchy percussion and a bouncing bassline, Omah moving between a relaxed lower tone and urgent high notes like someone switching gears without thinking about it. The ease is real, and it is fun.
"I Am" and "Holy Ghost" push toward something like confidence. The first builds through Afrohouse-inspired drums and wailing strings, Omah getting louder and more forceful across the song as if convincing himself alongside the listener. The second runs almost entirely on the warmth of group vocals, declarations of love repeated until they feel like prayer. Neither song ties everything together neatly. They just shift the frame slightly, suggesting that knowing yourself and hurting yourself are not as far apart as people like to think.
"Amen" closes the album without resolving it. His voice fades into the production, choral voices rise to the front, layers loop and overlap until everything slowly blurs. The album drifts to its end rather than landing on one, which feels true to everything that came before it.
What makes "Clarity of Mind" stand out, in Omah Lay's catalogue and in Afrobeats more broadly, is not any single song but how everything holds together. The production throughout leans on wailing strings, open spaces, basslines that shift between grounding and restlessness, and drums that feel more emotional than physical. The tempos change, but the centre stays the same: this music is made for sitting with, not moving to.
The vocal work across the album is what really sets it apart. From close-to-breaking fragility to cold distance to buried, textured sound, Omah uses his voice differently on almost every track, sometimes within the same song. That range is what stops the album's consistent inward focus from ever getting repetitive.
The songwriting avoids easy patterns. Sections repeat with purpose, refrains build meaning through repetition, and verses carry more weight than they usually would. The lyrics move between indulgence and honesty, confidence and collapse, sometimes in the same breath. That is not a problem. It is the point. Real clarity does not mean the contradictions go away. It means you can look at them without turning away.
"Clarity of Mind" is not a comfortable listen. It does not offer the kind of relief that Omah's most immediate early music did, and it is not trying to. What it gives instead is a harder, more thought-through kind of honesty, the kind that comes from a person who has spent real time with their own mess, and started making something from it instead of just reacting to it.
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Source: TrendyBeatz