Honey Bxby‘s Raw Honey doesn’t drip – it pours. Thick with emotion, slick with unfiltered honesty, and glazed in lush R&B sonics, the EP lives up to its name: sweet, sticky, and open. With each track, she delivers bite-sized doses of bold femininity and late-night vulnerability, all wrapped in sultry melodies and hypnotic rhythms. This is music for the ones who feel too much and speak too loud – and aren’t sorry about it.
“Intro”
A soft flicker before the flame. This is less a song than an invocation – a hazy pulse of vulnerability setting the stage for everything to come. It whispers rather than announces, letting you lean in and get close before she bares it all.
Here’s where the damage starts reflecting. “Broken Mirrors” explores self-image in the wake of betrayal and abandonment. It’s not about how someone else broke her – it’s about the slow, aching process of recognizing the cracks and staring at them anyways. Bleeding-edge, honesty, wrapped in haunting production.
A mellow anthem for emotional fatigue. She isn’t begging for love – she’s exhausted by it. “These Days” floats in that lonely space between wanting to feel again and being too tired to try. It’s one of the most quietly devastating tracks on the EP, and it hits like late-night overthinking.
Now she’s pissed. “LEFT EYE is fiery, dangerous, and absolutely fed up. A clear nod to Lisa “LEFT EYE” Lopes – bold, impulsive, unafraid to burn bridges just to stay warm. This is the track where Honey reminds you she can go from soft to savage real quick.
Equal parts seductive and scathing. Honey Bxby flips the script on who’s being played. This is her flex moment – owning her power while recognizing the game. The beat is smooth, but the message is razor-sharp: she knows her worth, and she’s not selling it cheap.
This is not heartbreak – it’s heat. “3AM” captures the euphoric tension of late-night longing, where lust and love blur in the dim hallway light. Honey Bxby’s soft, sultry vocals open the door – literally – and invite the night in, unfiltered and unashamed. Toosii meets her in the moment, his verse dripping with confidence and reckless charm. It’s a duet for the dangerously drawn: two people who know exactly what they want, and aren’t afraid to admit it. The beat pulses like a slow heartbeat, heavy with temptation. This is not a love song. It’s a craving, and it plays like one long inhale before everything catches fire.
This is Honey Bxby at her most unapologetically bold, laying claim to love with a venomous sweetness that dares anyone to test her. Over a beat that bumps with attitude, she fires off lines with unfiltered confidence, defending her relationship like it’s sacred ground. This isn’t insecurity – it’s dominance. Every lyric drips with warning, wrapped in playful bravado: she’s not here to share, and she’s not afraid to step to anyone who thinks otherwise. With a hook that loops like a mantra, Honey turns jealousy into power, making it clear: loyalty isn’t a question, it’s a rule.
“Think I Might” is Honey Bxby’s flirty spiral into the thrill of unexpected love – the kind that catches you off guard and suddenly has you texting back faster than you should. With playful vocals and a beat that feels like butterflies in your stomach, she captures the chaos of new attraction: the overthinking, the late-night stalling, the giddy confession that maybe, just maybe, this one’s different. It’s part diary entry, part daydream, where designer bags, good sex, and emotional safety all coexist in a messy, glittery crush. Honey sounds almost surprised by her own feelings, but she leans in anyway, giving us a bop that’s both braggadocious and tender.
“Right On Time” is Honey Bxby’s soft goodbye wrapped in velvet steel – a tender track that balances heartbreak with empowerment. She lets go with grace, calling out the half-hearted love that kept her waiting while someone better stood at the door. The lyrics are sharp with clarity: no more back-and-forth, no more emotional shortchange. With every “boy, bye,” she carves space for her own peace, trading chaos for consistency. The repetition of “he right on time” becomes both comfort and affirmation, a reminder that real love doesn’t arrive late or leave her questioning. It’s not just a song – it’s the sound of choosing better and walking away before the damage becomes permanent.
“Laying In His Bed” is Honey Bxby at her most conflicted – torn between physical presence and emotional absence, between what feels good and what feels right. Over a dreamy, intoxicating beat, she confesses the quiet betrayals that play out in her head while someone else holds her body. The lyrics drip with guilt, desire, and detachment, as she flips seamlessly between erotic imagery and emotional honesty. “You up in my head, I’m up in his bed” isn’t just a hook – it’s a haunting look of what-ifs, a soft scream of longing wrapped in satin sheets. This track doesn’t justify cheating – it mourns the emotional fallout of settling for less when your soul is already spoken for.
“LEFT EYE (remix) ft. Lola Brooke”
The mic-drop. With Lola Brooke joining her in righteous fury, the remix elevates the original into a war cry. Both artists embody the spirit of Left Eye – fiery, fearless, and done with the bullsh*t. It’s the perfect closer: aggressive, empowering, and unforgettable.
Raw Honey is not polished pop – it’s the sting that comes with sweetness. Honey Bxby is not afriad to be messy, loud, or painfully honest. In a world that often asks women to shrink, she spills over. And in doing so, she creates something that sticks.
This isn’t just an EP – it’s a revelation. One you’ll come back to again and again, especially when your heart is cracked but your crown still fits.
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