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Tressah – “Call Me” (WYFL Riddim): A New Wave Sound Connecting Africa to the Global Dancehall Scene

The global dancehall landscape continues to evolve in 2026, and one of the freshest entries comes from Tressah with her new track “Call Me”, riding the explosive WYFL Riddim.

This release positions Tressah within a powerful international movement, connecting African creativity to one of the most talked-about riddims of the year.

Based between Germany and Nairobi, Treesha embodies a transcontinental artistic identity, navigating seamlessly between:

  • European music circuits
  • East African creative hubs
  • Global reggae / dancehall networks

Her latest release on the WYFL Riddim confirms her position as a mobile, borderless artist already embedded in the industry.

WYFL Riddim: A 2026 Dancehall Phenomenon

The riddim has become:

  • A viral creative challenge across platforms
  • A multi-version ecosystem (dozens of tracks on the same beat)
  • A return to classic “one riddim culture” in dancehall

Even online communities describe it as:

“the biggest juggling in a long time”

For an artist like Treesha, the move is not about exposure—it is about:

  • Maintaining visibility in a competitive ecosystem
  • Aligning with a high-traffic riddim trend
  • Reinforcing presence alongside major and mid-tier global acts

This is network consolidation, not discovery.

csm_callme-treesha_597d39d3d2 Tressah – “Call Me” (WYFL Riddim): A New Wave Sound Connecting Africa to the Global Dancehall Scene

A Global Artist, Not a Newcomer

With “Call Me”, Treesha doesn’t enter the international scene—she operates within it.

Based between Germany and Nairobi, Treesha embodies a transcontinental artistic identity, navigating seamlessly between:

  • European music circuits
  • East African creative hubs
  • Global reggae / dancehall networks

Treesha stands out on the WYFL Riddim through her signature vocal clarity and controlled delivery, bringing a distinct identity that cuts through the collaborative landscape. The artist regularly shares riddims with reggae heavyweights such as Turbulence, Jah Sun and other established names, reinforcing her presence within the upper tier of the global scene


Why This Matters for Africa & the Diaspora

For actors in Africa (Nairobi, South Africa, Senegal… ) the lesson is precise:

Internationalization is no longer about relocation
It is about multi-local positioning

Treesha’s model shows:

  • You can build a career across territories
  • You can plug into global riddims without losing identity
  • You must think in terms of network, not geography

Platforms like SALYTVSN align with this logic:

  • Connecting local talent to global circuits
  • Promoting artists beyond borders
  • Structuring visibility for diaspora and local creatives

ajax-loader-2x Tressah – “Call Me” (WYFL Riddim): A New Wave Sound Connecting Africa to the Global Dancehall Scene

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