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Moyann drops Miss Toxic EP, aims for career-best impact

Moyann’s five-track Miss Toxic EP is already moving on radio and socials, with the title cut set up as the drop’s main conversation starter.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Moyann drops Miss Toxic EP, aims for career-best impact
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Moyann has put a sharp new marker on her current dancehall run with Miss Toxic, a five-track EP that arrived on all major digital streaming platforms on May 29, 2026 and is already being treated like a statement release. The title track is drawing the most attention, with movement on local and international radio plus growing chatter on social media, which gives the project an immediate commercial edge and makes it feel built for replay.

The set is compact, running just 12 minutes on Apple Music, but it is stacked with the kind of names and polish that can lift a short release into a serious conversation piece. Apple Music credits the project to Shakespeare Productions and Black State, while the official tracklist runs through Miss Toxic, Mad You, Break Up To Make Up, Cream Pie and Gwaan Suh. Official audio uploads have already gone live for the title track, produced by Anju Blaxx, alongside Breakup To Makeup and CreamPie, which are credited to Shakespeare. That rollout suggests a coordinated push, not a one-off upload.

Moyann has framed the EP as one of the strongest efforts of her career, and the timing matters. She first broke through in 2019 with Netflixxx N Chill, then kept building with solo cuts like A Nuh My Style and Meech Out, plus collaborations with Shenseea, Popcaan, Jahvillani, Jahshii and Tommy Lee Sparta. Miss Toxic reads like a checkpoint in that climb, the kind of release that lets fans measure how far she has come while pointing to where she is headed next.

There is also a bigger industry move underneath the music. A September 2025 report said Moyann had parted ways amicably with longtime manager and producer DJ Frass and signed with Canadian-based Protocol Entertainment, with her camp focused on widening her international fan base. That makes Miss Toxic more than a streaming drop. It sits inside a broader push for reach, especially after her Valentine’s Day 2026 collaboration with Popcaan, Sunday, was reported to have hit number one on the iTunes reggae singles chart.

For dancehall listeners looking for the next shareable release, the answer is already clear. Miss Toxic is the track doing the loudest work, and the EP around it feels calibrated for the same purpose, to keep Moyann moving from rising name to main-room talking point.

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