nyb collan Brings a Kampala Edge to UK Drill on "Let her go"
A Ugandan Artist Folds Afrobeat Warmth Into Cold UK Drill on His New Single
Let her go arrives from a corner of the UK Drill map most listeners would not check first: Kampala. nyb collan, a young Ugandan drill artist working in the genre’s sliding 808 dialect, dropped the single on 2 May 2026. Since then he has spent his time collecting early write-ups rather than watching it slip past. For an emerging artist thousands of miles from London, that early pickup says something.
You can listen to our full playlist which contains the artist’s music, and know more about the artist’s work by scrolling down the page.


A Drill Framework With East African Warmth
UK Drill runs on a recognisable set of parts: sliding 808 basslines, clipped hi-hat triplets, and dark minor-key loops. Those loops leave space for a rapper to sit just behind the beat. Let her go keeps that framework intact, then bends it. nyb collan threads the cold London template with the hip-hop and afrobeat colours of his own scene. That blend is the one East African outlets have already flagged as his calling card. The result reads as drill first, with a rhythmic bounce that points back to Kampala rather than the UK capital.
That fusion is the most useful thing to know going in. Purists who want their drill stark will hear the genre’s machinery doing its job. Listeners who follow how drill absorbs local accents, from Brooklyn to Ghana, will hear a version routed through Uganda. Either way, the single sits inside the lineage instead of borrowing its surface.

Why nyb collan’s Kampala Drill Record Stands Out
Drill has always travelled. It left Chicago, found a second home in South London, and kept moving. Scenes in New York, Australia, Ireland, and across West Africa have since rebuilt it. What it has rarely had is a strong East African entry. That is exactly the gap nyb collan is stepping into. A Ugandan artist treating UK Drill as a first language, not a passing novelty, is a genuinely fresh proposition. It should land with anyone who tracks where the genre heads next.
His framing backs that up. nyb collan has talked about offering something honest to the drill sound rather than a straight copy of it. Let her go carries that intent. The title signals a record built around a parting. Drill often circles that kind of subject without slowing down, and he gives it a little more room here.


Who “Let her go” Is For
If your rotation already holds the melodic side of UK Drill, this lands in familiar territory. Fans of Central Cee will recognise the instinct to make the genre sing as much as snarl. He pairs glossy, hook-led writing with drill’s rhythmic base, and nyb collan shares that instinct. Listeners drawn to Headie One will hear a familiar patience too. Headie helped build the spacious, half-time drill flow that lets every bar breathe. And anyone who came to UK rap through J Hus will clock the afrobeat undercurrent here. His afroswing fused West African rhythms with British rap, and nyb collan reads as a natural extension of that crossover.
The single aims squarely at the diggers, the playlist builders, and the early adopters. They like to find an artist before the rest of the timeline does. nyb collan has been quietly building a catalogue, and Let her go works as a strong entry point into it.
Early Coverage and a Growing Drill Profile
Still, his rise has not gone unnoticed. Independent outlets including Demerol Press have profiled his Afro-drill direction. Issuewire has tracked his momentum too, flagging Let her go among his recent releases. For an emerging artist, that kind of attention this early signals something worth watching.
From the RapStar.News curator desk: “What makes Let her go stick is geography. A drill record with this much London polish coming out of Kampala is rare. nyb collan treats the afrobeat in his roots as part of the rhythm section, not a garnish. That is the detail we will follow on his next move.”
nyb collan has been clear about what the early support means to him. “The early support from platforms like Blogspot and Issuewire, and the feedback from listeners, has been incredibly motivating,” he says. “I’m excited for more people to discover the track.”
Where to Stream nyb collan
Let her go is out now on all major streaming platforms. Follow nyb collan on Spotify to catch whatever comes next. Keep up with him on Instagram for release news straight from the Kampala scene. You can also dig into more of his catalogue on Audiomack.


