Tilly Valentine Flips The Other Woman Story On Its Head In 'Undercover' With Meduulla
- Liam Tyler

- 3 days ago
- 2 min read
Undercover doesn’t waste time pretending this story needs more drama. It’s already been done.

Instead, Tilly Valentine takes a familiar setup and strips it right back. Two women caught in the same situation usually means tension, back-and-forth, and a predictable fallout. Undercover refuses that. Alongside Manchester rapper Meduulla, she keeps the focus exactly where it should be, and that restraint is what gives the track its edge.
It also avoids the usual overcorrection. There’s no forced “we’re stronger together” moment pushed to the front, and no over-explained message either. The track trusts the listener to get it, which makes it land harder than most attempts at the same idea.
Sonically, it stays tight and slightly distant. Minimal R&B drums tick underneath a low, steady bassline, leaving space for the vocals to carry the tension. Tilly leans into a controlled, almost unfazed delivery, like she’s already processed the situation. Meduulla shifts the energy when she steps in. Her tone is more pointed, her delivery clipped and direct, cutting through the track with a bit more urgency. It’s the moment that gives the song its real lift. Speaking on the collaboration, Tilly said:
“In a world where women are so often pitted against each other, working with Meduulla felt like flipping that expectation on its head. It was empowering to build something where we stand together.”
The sentiment is clear, but the track is sharper when it leaves that idea in the background. Spell it out too much, and it risks sounding like a caption. Here, the writing already does enough.
As the final release before Cupid Killer, it works as a signal rather than a statement. It doesn’t try to be massive, and it probably shouldn’t. But if this is the direction she’s heading in, the next step is making it hit harder. Right now, she sounds close to fully settling into her lane.
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