Victony Proves He's Very Stubborn in New EP
If Victony’s debut album Stubborn introduced fans to his unbreakable spirit, his new EP Very Stubborn cements it. Dropped as a surprise, the eight-track project moves away from the glossy, radio-friendly polish of his previous releases and instead leans into something rawer, grittier, and far more textured. Victony has always balanced melancholy and rhythm with unusual precision, but this time he fully embraces the Outlaw persona he has been building. The production is cinematic — heavy orchestral swells, distorted 808s, and atmospheric layers mirror the chaos of his journey from the streets of Ojo to the brink of global ascension. Very Stubborn plays like a sonic diary from an artist who simply refuses to bend.
Lyrically, Very Stubborn finds Victony at his most introspective. On songs like “Way Home,” he confronts the emotional toll of success — the loneliness, the pressure, the paranoia. He’s no longer simply singing about overcoming physical obstacles; he’s dissecting the mental endurance required to survive in an industry where fame is both a blessing and a battlefield. The writing is sharper and more direct than ever. Betrayal, loyalty, resilience — he tackles these themes with a clarity that cuts deep, leaving no space for interpretation.
What makes the EP truly stand out is its structure. Very Stubborn is sequenced like a short film, meant to be experienced from start to finish. There are no filler moments — only chapters. The shift from the high-adrenaline chaos of “Tanko” to the soft, piano-driven closer is intentionally jarring, a representation of the duality in Victony's life: the loud, public persona and the quiet, private struggles. It’s a bold artistic move, and it works.
Ultimately, Very Stubborn is a declaration of permanence. In a musical era dominated by fleeting viral hits, Victony delivers a body of work that feels grounded, intentional, and unshakeable. He is telling the world that he’s not a moment — he’s a force. If you thought he was stubborn before, this EP makes one thing clear: you haven’t seen anything yet. This is the sound of an artist who has fully embraced his identity and is ready for whatever comes next.
