Mick Jenkins Drops Rich New Surprise ‘Words I Should’ve Said’

Stunning new track sees Jenkins and Emil team up with Enny for another “A Murder of Crows” song

Last updated: 18th September 2025

Mick Jenkins continues a formidable campaign with a stunning, verbose work of rap music on Words I Should’ve Said. Teaming up with UK hip-hop artist Enny — likely through producer Emil — it hits the spot for rap game aficionados everywhere.

Mick Jenkins & Emil ft Enny – Words I Should’ve Said (Official Music Video)

Review: Raw and Passive Emotions Unleashed

As usual, Jenkins hits hard on a gentle composition littered with melodically calming strings, plucked throughout its four minute run time over staccato piano keys.

READ MORE: Locksmith Drops Furious New Album ‘Wine & Circus’

Part of the artist’s strengths lies in his selection, and this curation leads to the talents of Enny, who entertains a wildly soft blast of lyrically gifted scripts and narratives. Performing a multisyllabic bout of wordplay, it resonates, and as the audience you grow closer:

“Hindsight will hit, In Hindsight it clicked, In hindsight signs did exist, I’m fighting this.” – Enny

Equally, Jenkins protrudes attention with poetically underlined streams of lyrics. The second verse in particular towards its ends, is one many will relate to, and the parlour of dwindling thoughts:

“You should know I’m prolly faded most of the time, The older I get my pops fading out of my mind, But You should know thats plaguing me too, This not visual ID usually paint but its true, These ain’t the greatest parts of me but they apart of me too.” – Mick Jenkins

The two intensely oscillate, naturally capturing the nuances of a jilted relationship. The delivery broods tension, with a sense of dramatic inquiry between the pair, upheld by Emil’s polished score.

The Verdict

This track has Enny written all over it, showcasing Mick’s penchant for the craft. Features are often overused within hip-hop; while it is an intrinsic part of the culture, selective and necessary additions serve to increase its volume.

This is something the rapper does exceptionally well; his sharp verses execute fine ideas of where his upcoming album, “A Murder of Crows,” is going, and that is the stuff of legends.

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