So Nuriddin returns with her new single, “Hurt Myself,” carrying it with quiet strength and intention. The French singer-songwriter opens the door to something intimate and unguarded. It feels less like a staged performance and more like a late-night confession wrapped in velvet harmonies.
Rooted in her signature urban neo-spiritual sound, So bridges Paris and New York with spine-tingling vocals, fluid scatting, and luminous layers of harmony. “Hurt Myself” is raw and reflective, transforming personal reckoning into something softly powerful. Rather than directing her fire outward, she turns it inward, reminding us that honest self examination can be revolutionary in its own right.
There is legacy in her voice. As the daughter of Jalal Mansur Nuriddin, often called the grandfather of rap and a founding member of The Last Poets, she comes from a lineage grounded in rhythmic poetry and conscious artistry. Where her father’s generation sparked movements through fearless declarations, So channels that same awareness into gentle introspection.
“Hurt Myself” becomes a bridge between generations and cities, between spoken word ancestry and modern soul innovation, and between pain and the slow unfolding of healing. Her voice aches, swells, and ultimately soars, guiding listeners through a landscape of vulnerability that feels both fragile and deeply self-aware.


