GloRilla – March [Video] + Special [Audio]
GloRilla is closing out the year with a two-pack that hits from two very different angles.
“March” and “Special” arrive as a double release, with one built to rattle stadium bleachers and the other aimed straight at your love language – plus a full, cinematic video for “March” to bring the whole thing to life.
On “March”, Big Glo leans all the way into HBCU energy. The beat from Go Grizzly, B100 and Aaron “thank Aaron” Bolton piles booming drums, swaggering brass lines and sharp snare rolls on top of each other until it feels less like a regular single. It feels more like a marching-band chant that accidentally turned into a rap record.
In the video, she takes that idea literally: decked out in band gear, leading a squad into a Drumline-style showdown, she turns the field into a war zone of choreography, drums and call-and-response hooks. The entire thing is shot like a mini-movie, with Troy Roscoe’s direction giving it wide, cinematic frames instead of simple performance shots.
“Special” flips the mood without softening Glo’s stance. Over a smoother, melodic backdrop, she slides into a more relationship-focused lane, but the core is still self-worth and affirmation – not asking if she’s special, just demanding you say it out loud.
The production team of Bankroll Got It and Truckee Street (with Beats4TheStars, Pliznaya and BC On The Beat) wrap her vocals in warm keys and floating drums. This gives her room to switch between flexing and honest, almost conversational lines about what she expects from anyone lucky enough to be in her orbit.
Coming off a huge run – breakthrough singles, a Grammy nod and her debut album “Glorious“, plus a full headlining tour – this two-pack feels like the start of the next chapter.
“March” is built for game days, step shows and anyone who wants to feel ten feet tall; “Special” is the one you keep in rotation when you need to be reminded exactly what you bring to the table. Put them back-to-back, and you get the full GloRilla package: loud, confident, cinematic – and very much in control of the story.
