Alaine’s My Last Nerve joins Happy Wife rhythm with love-hook visualizer
Alaine’s April 24 single drops into the nine-track Happy Wife Riddim, pairing a relationship-heavy visualizer with a stacked 2026 rhythm release.

Alaine’s My Last Nerve entered the Happy Wife rhythm run on April 24, 2026, giving the project another familiar voice and another reason for reggae listeners to keep the folder open. Issued through Scikron Entertainment Group and Big Yard Music, the single did not arrive as a stray upload. It landed as part of a wider digital rollout that had already been building around the Happy Wife Riddim, with the Part II package positioned as a nine-track release built for juggling, comparison, and repeat plays.
That larger set matters. The Happy Wife Riddim (Part II) pairs Alaine with Gyptian, Busy Signal, Brian & Tony Gold, Bling Dawg, Kananga, Kevyn V, Press Kay, and Sevanteen, turning My Last Nerve into one voice inside a busy field rather than a standalone experiment. Riddims World had already framed the song as part of the Happy Wife rhythm conversation alongside cuts from Christopher Martin, Jahzeal, Lutan Fyah, and others, which gives Alaine’s cut a place in a broader 2026 release network instead of a simple single drop.

The song’s digital presentation is built for quick circulation. Reggaeville filed My Last Nerve as a digital release, and the accompanying YouTube audio credit listed Alaine Laughton as composer and lyricist, while pointing back to the April 24, 2026 release date and the ONErpm pipeline. A separate visualizer pushed the track with a clear emotional frame: “Love isn’t perfect… but it’s real.” The description sharpens that idea into the language of everyday relationship friction, aimed at listeners who have “rolled their eyes, sighed, and still stayed because the love is deeper than the little annoyances.”

That is where My Last Nerve stands out inside the Happy Wife rollout. The rhythm is already crowded with names people know, but Alaine’s cut adds a sharp, personal edge that leans into lovers-rock honesty without losing radio-ready polish. It keeps her 2026 run moving, gives the project another anchor point, and reinforces how this rhythm is shaping into a conversation about durable love, small annoyances, and the way a strong hook can make both feel instantly familiar.
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