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Redlite Turns Grief Into Motion on "Sorry for Your Loss: Side B" EP


Bronx rapper expands his “Sorry for Your Loss” chapter with genre-bending records and two standout collaborations


BRONX, NY — Redlite releases his new EP, Sorry for Your Loss: Side B, a five-song project that moves through grief, reflection, and late-night honesty. Switching gears between rap intensity, R&B melody, and electronic-driven momentum. The EP arrived February 2, 2026, and is available now across major streaming platforms.


At the center of Side B is a cinematic emotional arc: the emptiness after loss, the long walk through memory, and the relationship fragments that linger. Redlite’s writing stays personal, while the production choices keep the listening experience dynamic, ranging from slower, mood-heavy cuts to a rap/EDM fusion that hits like a surge of adrenaline.


If “Side A” is the initial shock, “Side B” is what happens once the noise dies down and you’re left with the real work: sitting with the absence, replaying memories, and trying to move forward without pretending you’re fine. Across five tracks, Redlite leans into slower tempos, reflective writing, and hook-driven emotion. Building songs that feel personal without getting trapped in self-pity.


The EP also features two collaborations with D-Red Wit Da Red Cap, adding extra texture and melody to key moments in the tracklist.


EP Highlights


1) Empty House (Rap x EDM)

“Empty House” flips the grief theme into something physical, like pacing through rooms that don’t feel lived-in anymore. The rap foundation keeps it grounded, but the EDM lift gives it that restless, racing-thought energy, like your mind refusing to stop replaying what was. It’s a standout opener because it immediately announces the EP’s lane: emotional rap that isn’t afraid to bend genres.


2) Long Walk ft. D-Red Wit Da Red Cap (Slow rap + R&B hook)

“Long Walk” moves like a conversation you’ve been rehearsing in your head, quiet, slow-burning, and honest. The R&B hook adds a soft landing spot, while the verses keep it reflective, like two people processing the same pain from different angles. The feature feels purposeful: not a “look who I got on the track,” but a real contribution to the emotional arc of the EP.


3) Gone With the Wind (Interlude) (Theme rap interlude)

Short doesn’t mean small. This interlude plays like a scene change, moody, minimal, and meant to reset the room before the next run of emotional weight. It keeps the project cinematic: a breath between chapters that still says something instead of just filling space.


4) Missing Piece (Slow rap about love & loss)

This is the heart-check record, Redlite leaning into the ache of feeling incomplete after love fades or disappears. “Missing Piece” sits in that space where you’re trying to be strong but still carrying the “what if” thoughts. The slower pace gives the writing room to land, and the concept fits the EP title perfectly: it’s not just about loss, it’s about what loss changes in you.


5) Best Catch (Remix) ft. D-Red Wit Da Red Cap (Slow rap + R&B hook)

The remix closes the EP with a replayable blend of melody and reflection, like turning the pain into something you can actually ride to. The R&B hook adds warmth, and the feature brings extra texture, giving the outro the feel of a final late-night text you don’t send but you needed to write.


“Sorry for Your Loss: Side B” is available now on major platforms including Spotify, with official audio uploads also appearing via YouTube distribution credits.



Stream the EP


Official YouTube Track Links


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