“Talking to the moon, think I’m running out of ideas to get you back.” The first line of “Maybe” by Nali featuring Coi Leray arrives over warm electric keys and a relaxed R&B groove. The chords lean toward Neo-Soul harmony, slightly jazzy in their voicing, while the rhythm settles into an easy head-nod tempo.
Nali opens the verse quietly, her voice low and steady. When she reaches “Think I really like when you dubbing my calls, baby / I don’t usually chase, for you I might, maybe,” the doubt is written into the final word.
The chorus introduces Coi Leray immediately, with both singers sharing the hook. “Don’t give your heart away / I’m always here to aid it,” they sing together, following the same melodic contour. The hook moves through short melodic phrases that repeat easily in memory.
“Maybe” by Nali and Coi Leray is about two people caught between attraction and self-protection, unsure whether staying together will lead to love or another disappointment. The hook pulls in two directions at once. “I got buku love, won’t you come and find out” sits directly against “Maybe we’re just better off.” Then another line complicates it further: “Running games, we could play / But you been falling in love / Don’t know if this is safe.” One person has already crossed into feelings; the other is still deciding whether to follow.
Both singers share the section “You got something that I want right now / If you gon buss it baby, better buss it down,” a moment of uncomplicated desire that briefly interrupts the hesitation before the questioning returns.
The second verse shifts the pace. Coi Leray’s cadence moves faster across the beat, bringing a more direct delivery into the conversation. She opens with “I’d rather be alone than be your friend / The feelings too strong, ain’t no way we can pretend.”
She pushes further: “The honeymoon phase woulda thought it never end / Now I’m second guessing, maybe we’re just better off friends.” Nali sounds uncertain in the hook; Leray sounds impatient with the situation.
She continues that thought with “The way you put it on me, ain’t no way we can be friends.” Attraction interrupts every attempt at distance. A few lines later she pictures stepping away entirely: “I just wanna hit the club and slow dance / I just wanna be a pretty girl and spend bands,” before closing the verse with “If it ain’t meant to be then we can shake hands.”
Released on 27 February 2026, “Maybe” by Nali featuring Coi Leray was written by the two artists and produced by Freaky Rob and Kenneth Paige.
The single continues Nali’s run of contemporary R&B releases following earlier tracks such as “Options,” while also extending Coi Leray’s long list of cross-genre collaborations.
The production leans into a familiar Neo-Soul-influenced R&B palette built around warm keys and an easy tempo. The sound is inviting but also predictable. Nothing in the arrangement attempts to push the genre forward.
What gives “Maybe” its identity is the contrast between the two performances. Nali approaches the relationship with quiet reflection, while Leray delivers her verse with sharper impatience. Two people describing the same dead end from opposite sides of it, one still asking questions, the other already tired of asking them.
By the final repetition of “Maybe we’re just better off,” the phrase still hangs in the air, carried by the same warm chords that introduced the song.
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