Afro RnB singer songwriter Nana Fofie continues to deepen her emotional storytelling with the release of her new single titled Where It Hurts, a record that reflects the honesty and vulnerability that have gradually become the core of her artistry.

For listeners who have followed her journey, Nana Fofie’s music has always lived at the intersection of emotion and relatability. Since first gaining attention in 2017 through a series of YouTube covers that showcased her distinctive voice and natural interpretation of popular records, the Netherlands based Ghanaian artist has steadily grown into one of the most recognizable Afro European voices in the global music space.
Over the years, that early attention transformed into real momentum. Millions of streams across Spotify and millions of views on YouTube have helped establish her as a consistent presence in the Afro RnB conversation. Songs such as Selling Dreams, which has accumulated more than 13 million streams, and her widely loved Mad Over You Mashup have become defining moments in her catalogue, each reinforcing her ability to blend African influences with contemporary RnB storytelling.
Her career has also taken her beyond streaming platforms. Nana Fofie has shared major stages internationally, including performing as an opening act on the Nicki World Tour alongside Nicki Minaj and Juice WRLD, a milestone that further expanded her global visibility.
With Where It Hurts, Nana Fofie leans even deeper into the emotional territory that fans have come to appreciate. The song carries the quiet intensity of someone confronting personal truths, exploring the pain, vulnerability and reflection that often sit beneath relationships and human connection. Rather than masking emotion behind surface level melodies, the record allows her voice and writing to guide listeners through those fragile spaces people rarely speak about openly.
The single also arrives as another strong moment in a growing catalogue that continues to show her range. From the hopeful reflections of Selling Dreams to the more introspective tone of Where It Hurts, Nana Fofie’s music reveals an artist who is comfortable allowing her audience to experience both ambition and vulnerability through her sound.
At a time when audiences increasingly connect with authenticity, Nana Fofie remains one of the few Afro European artists consistently bridging cultural influences while maintaining a deeply personal songwriting style. Her loyal fanbase, widely known as NaNation, continues to grow across continents, reflecting the universal nature of the stories she tells through her music.
With Where It Hurts, she does not simply release another single. She opens another emotional chapter in a journey that has always been about honesty, connection and music that speaks directly to the heart.



