Shenseea - Work Me Out Ft. Wizkid Instrumental Apr 2026

Devon forgot the girl in the lime-green dress. His mouth went dry. He had seen Taya dance a hundred times, but never like this. This wasn't a performance. It was a séance. She was summoning every version of herself she’d been too tired, too heartbroken, or too scared to show him.

Her shoulders rolled, liquid and cool. That was her saying, “I see you looking.” Her hips traced a lazy figure-eight. That was her saying, “But you gon’ have to work for this.”

Devon saw it first. The way her neck straightened. The way her eyes, previously dull with boredom, caught the light like a cat’s. Shenseea - Work Me Out Ft. WizKid Instrumental

Devon started toward her, a clumsy apology already forming on his lips.

Taya moved into the center of the floor. She didn't dance to the beat; she became its translator. The instrumental was a conversation. The soft, melodic synth line was the question – WizKid’s smooth, unhurried invitation. The percussive kick and the rattling snare were Shenseea’s witty, sharp reply. Devon forgot the girl in the lime-green dress

She let the instrumental play her out, her movements growing smaller, more internal, until the final synth note faded and the selector cut the sound. The crowd erupted in a low, appreciative hum. Someone handed her a bottle of water.

It wasn't the full track. It was the instrumental of Work Me Out – the Shenseea and WizKid vibe, stripped down to its bones. The rolling, hypnotic beat, the soft pad of Afro-synth, the pulse of a dembow that felt less like a rhythm and more like a second heartbeat. This wasn't a performance

Then, the selector dropped the needle.

The crowd thinned around her, drawn in by the gravity of her isolation. She closed her eyes. In the darkness behind her lids, she wasn’t in a sweaty warehouse. She was on a beach at sunset, the sand cool under her feet, the ocean breathing in time with the track. She was in a Lagos club, the air thick with cologne and joy. She was in a New York loft, rain sliding down the windows.

When the breakdown hit—just the percussion and a ghostly echo of the synth—Taya froze for a single, perfect second. Silence in the rhythm. Then, as the beat crashed back in, she turned. Her eyes found Devon’s. She didn’t smile. She didn’t gloat. She just tilted her head, a single drop of sweat tracing a path down her temple.