The Red Bull Symphonic crowd lifted the roof last night when Asake walked on stage and performed an unreleased song. People reacted instantly. They screamed, froze, and tried to understand what they were hearing. It felt like one of those moments where the whole room holds its breath, then explodes.

Asake surprises fans at Red Bull Symphonic by performing an unreleased track alongside K-pop artists.
Asake drove the night’s biggest surprise, but he didn’t stand there alone. Several celebrities showed up during the performance, and different artists joined him on stage. The crossover caught everyone off guard in the best possible way. Asake share a stage Wizkid, Central cee, especially with a full symphony supporting every note, so the combination felt fresh and almost surreal.
Midway through his set, Asake changed the pace and introduced the unreleased track without warning. He signaled the orchestra, and they followed him with calm precision. The strings, horns and deep percussion wrapped around his vocals, creating a cinematic texture that filled the hall. I think that orchestral weight is what made the moment hit harder than a typical concert drop. It sounded bigger, fuller, almost like the soundtrack to a film no one has seen yet.
The entire performance took place at the Red Bull Symphonic event, a show known for blending classical arrangements with contemporary genres. It’s the kind of platform where artists feel free to take risks, and Asake leaned fully into that freedom.
The set happened just last night, but videos started spreading online within minutes. Fans clipped every angle they could find and replayed the snippets like detectives trying to decode the full track. Some even slowed the audio down to catch hidden details.
Social media hasn’t calmed down since. Listeners are begging Asake to release the song officially, while others can’t stop talking about the unexpected blend of Afrobeats and Rapper central Cee energy and a live symphonic backbone. And honestly, it’s easy to see why. Moments like that don’t happen often, and when they do, they stick.