Put It On God: Sarkodie’s New Rap Anthem With Alor G

Put It On God is here for the rap heads who still love heavy beats and sharp punchlines, not just sing along hooks. Sarkodie links up with Alor G, and from the first few seconds it feels like a straight confidence boost built for streets, gyms and night drives.​​

Put It On God Lyrics by Sarkodie Feat. AlorG

What Happened With Put It On God

Put It On God is Sarkodie’s new hip hop single with Alor G under Sarkcess Music and Eagle Plug. It comes with a clean lyrics video by Babs Direction and it is already up on Spotify, Apple Music, Boomplay and YouTube.​

The beat from Fortune Dane is dark and bouncy, with room for Sarkodie’s fast verses and Alor G’s hook. Lyrically, Sarkodie talks hunger, pressure, money and staying locked in while people doubt, and Alor G rides the “I put it on God” chorus that sounds like both a brag and a prayer.​​

The Part People Are Missing

Most posts just say “Sarkodie drops new single with Alor G” and bounce. They don’t really sit on how huge this is for Alor G, who’s clearly being pushed as that next‑up voice Sark is bringing into the front row.

On top of that, plenty of write‑ups skip the real sauce: Put It On God continues Sarkodie’s long “God and grind” storyline from Adonai days, just in a raw, street‑rap mood. He’s still using churchy language to talk hustle, danger and survival, and that mix of faith plus fearlessness is exactly why fans feel him so deeply.

And then there’s the movement. The song is already popping up on Apple charts and fan pages are busy tracking its climb on iTunes and across streams, proving that when the package is tight, hard Ghana rap can still stand chest‑to‑chest with softer sounds.

So if you’re into this side of Ghana hip hop, Put It On God slides perfectly next to older Sark tapes like Highest and Black Love when you’re building a no‑skip rap playlist.

Why Put It On God Matters For Ghana Rap

Put It On God keeps Ghana rap loud in a season where Afrobeats and amapiano usually run the party and radio space. It shows that when production, concept and collaboration line up, straight hip hop can still sound big, clean and global.​​

For younger rappers, the song is a simple blueprint. Put It On God works because the idea is clear, the hook is strong and the verses feel hungry, not because it chases a dance challenge. So if you are planning your own single, you can study how the structure and energy here keep the song replayable.​

If this is your lane, you can also check our earlier pieces on Sarkodie and Ghana rap moments from December in Ghana to see how the scene keeps changing.

How Creators Can Use Put It On God

Put It On God is built for content. It fits gym playlists, morning “let’s get it” walks and any reel or TikTok edit that shows grind, streetwear or nightlife with attitude.​​

Creators can flip it in many ways. You can do lyric breakdowns, Twi‑to‑English clips, bar‑rating videos or “this line finished me” reactions with Put It On God as the soundtrack. Event pages and concert blogs already use it under recap videos, especially after Sarkodie and Alor G performed it at Tidal Rave, and DJs can use it as the “wake the crowd up” rap moment between Afrobeats sets.​

Is There An Album Tracklist Yet?

Right now, Put It On God is a single, not part of a full multi‑track album. On Apple Music, Spotify, Shazam and Deezer, it appears as Put It On God – Single, with just one track.

  1. Put It On God – Sarkodie feat. Alor G (about 3:34)

Streaming platforms list Sarkodie’s older projects like Black Love, Highest and Jamz separately, and they are not part of any new Put It On God album. If Sarkodie later announces a full project built around this sound, expect this track to sit near the front as one of the anchor songs.​​

Conclusion

If you still believe “rap no dey die”, Put It On God is an easy anthem to keep on repeat. It keeps Sarkodie’s legacy sharp, gives Alor G a real boost and reminds everyone that Ghana hip hop still has bite.​​

As the year moves, a track like this can push more MCs to drop their own hard singles, which makes things more fun for listeners. For now, Put It On God is the one holding the rap flag high.​

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