RM4E Freestyle is Vale Pain’s raw diary entry set to a hypnotic trap beat. In just a few minutes she races from her 14-year-old summer spent cruising city streets to the glitter of luxury cars, Versace towels, and rooftop smoke sessions by the cathedral. The contrast is deliberate: she shows how faith in “God’s big plan,” fierce ambition, and hard lessons about envy, betrayal, and street life have driven her far from gangstas, troie e periferia into a world of shiny sedans and six-figure bank accounts.
Yet the freestyle is not a victory lap, it is a confession. Vale admits the nightmares that still wake her, friends who never left the corner, and the fear that success might strip her of her humanity. The hook “RM4E” (Real Music For Ever) is her chosen family, the compass she consults while “aiming at the stars” and wondering who will join her up there. Behind the swagger and Milan-red blood references, the song is a tender reminder that money can’t replace mom’s love, loyalty is priceless, and the past always rides in the back seat no matter how fast the new car moves.