Wafia Struts So 'Good' In Stellar New Musique Video!!!




Just last week we told you carebears about Brisbane-based musician Wafia and how she's instantaneously become an Australian favorite and now one of our new ones as well. With her moving and stirring funky fun mid-tempo dance groove ‘I’m Good’. It's a jam that describes post-heartbreak in such a delectable, yummy sugary manner that holds strong with hooks and the bass beat.

A collabo with co-writer Wrabel and producer John Hill, the tune sees the singer Wafia's assertive, and vocal fire verses contrast magnificently with a phenomenal and memorable chorus. The whimsical production demonstrates that ‘I’m Good’ proves that the end of summer intertwined with the commencement of Autumn Fall season lays a 20/20 gem. A sweet transition from summer sunkist to Halloween ghouls!

Wafia herself describes the song, “I’m Good is an attempt at writing a self-fulfilling prophecy. At the time I could foresee heartbreak that I was going to have to work through and I wanted to write the song that I’d want to hear at the end of it all. There was this running joke between myself and Wrabel that we’d love to write a song with the word ‘loser’ in it and the song came together very quickly after that.”



Now we have Wafia's accompanying musique video for her late summer tune. Directed by James Robinson, the songstress strolls around leisurely around a Los Angeles neighborhood and takes some time to chit-chat with guests, including “I’m Good” co-writer Wrabel and Zoe Lawrence, who also happened to have shot the single art.

“Because filming any kind of music video isn’t hard enough, we set out to shoot this video as one continuous shot at sunset,” Wafia spilled to sources. “I’m so glad we went for it, though; it felt so natural, and seeing it back, I can’t imagine having done it any other way. The video for me was all about reinterpreting the song into a magical realism context: seeing poetry in the every day.”

“The power of Wafia’s song is that you’re able to turn such an ordinary moment -- a walk home -- into something much more powerful and re-affirming; so the video became about seeing her build from this state naturalism to a state of pure ecstasy that the song encourages. The video is about bringing pop back down from its inaccessible heights and seeing yourself be liberated even in the simplest, everyday moments."

Wafia’s definitely one to watch and if this is any indication of where the eclectic singer-songwriter of Iraqi-Syrian descent is going with her angelic vocals then we're eager for more!

Without further ado allow us to introduce you to carebears to Wafia and her powerfully stellar "I’m Good" musique video.





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