Jahvillani nuh come fi play — and "GG" is all the proof you need. From the very first bar, the Mobay general locks in with that signature menacing delivery that has made him one of the most electrifying voices in modern Dancehall. The production hits hard with a dark, rolling riddim that carries that raw street energy the culture was built on, layered with crisp percussion and bass frequencies that demand serious speaker respect. This is the kind of track that was built for the dancehall floor — the type of riddim that mek the selector pull up before it even done play. What separates Jahvillani from the crowd is his ability to blend raw lyrical aggression with an almost surgical precision in his flow. On "GG," he rides the beat like a veteran, switching cadences at exactly the right moments, spitting lyrics that carry weight and authenticity. The wordplay is sharp, the confidence is undeniable, and the delivery never loses its edge from intro to outro. This isn't packaged pop-dancehall — this is the real thing, rooted in the tradition of lyrical supremacy that defines the genre's greatest gatekeepers. The cultural fingerprints are all over it, speaking directly to the streets and the dancehall faithful who know the difference. "GG" is a certified statement from an artist who continues to level up while staying true to his roots. Jahvillani reminds every selector, dancer, and dancehall head exactly why his name rings bells from Kingston to the diaspora. When the history of this era gets written, tracks like this will be the receipts — and the general delivered.