LATHAN WARLICK & 1K PHEW - KINNA WANNA (VISUAL LYRICS)

Details
Title | LATHAN WARLICK & 1K PHEW - KINNA WANNA (VISUAL LYRICS) |
Author | Faith in Music Lyric Videos |
Duration | 2:34 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=dNSLHAo03vc |
Description
“Kinna Wanna” by Lance Warlick & 1K Phew is more than a flex—it’s a celebration of God’s favor, community, and unapologetic joy. It’s the sound of someone who remembers the trenches, yet dreams loud, rides bold, and gives God the glory for it all. At first listen, it bumps like a summer anthem, but underneath the thump is a heart that’s grateful—and generous.
There’s power in wanting to “bring the bag back around” not just for yourself, but for your city. It speaks to a kingdom mindset in a culture often ruled by self. These aren’t empty boasts; they’re visions shaped by blessing. The dream of big houses and courtside seats isn’t about ego—it’s about sharing, showing up, and shutting the city down with light, not noise.
The song pulses with gratitude: “I ain’t even made it and told God to cover me with nothing but His favor.” That line captures the posture of someone walking in promise before the platform fully arrives. It’s not about having everything. It’s about knowing Who gave everything and walking in that favor like it’s already done. There’s freedom in dreaming with God like that.
The track also gives space for real-life joy—barbecues, cool nights, foreign foods, fast cars. And instead of guilt-tripping those moments, the lyrics flip it: “Make the best of what you’re given, ’cause it’s still divine.” That’s theology wrapped in rhythm. God’s goodness isn’t just for the prayer closet—it’s for the grill, the garage, the getaway too.
This is a song for people who’ve seen struggle and still believe in celebration. For those who know you can praise in the pit, but also turn up in the favor. It’s a reminder that purpose and pleasure aren’t always opposites—when God is in the middle, both get redeemed.
“Kinna Wanna” calls us to dream big, live loud, and bless others in the process. It’s southern roots, kingdom mindset, and real-life gratitude all rolled into a track that hits hard—but points even higher.