Fez — Moroccan hitmaker RedOne and Togolese duo Toofan have released “Stay Up High Morocco,” a new patriotic anthem landing at the exact moment Morocco is preparing to step onto football’s biggest stage.
The song’s timing is the real story. Morocco will begin its 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign this month in Group C, opening against Brazil on June 13 at New York New Jersey Stadium. The Atlas Lions will then face Scotland on June 19 in Boston and Haiti on June 24 in Atlanta.
“Stay Up High Morocco” is a motivational anthem, a football-season chant, and a polished piece of soft-power messaging arriving days before Moroccans shift into full tournament mode.
A World Cup anthem before Brazil
The video, released through MDA Production, had already recorded more than 500,000 views within its first day.
The track’s lyrics make its purpose clear. The chorus repeats direct lines of national pride, including “Stay up high Morocco,” “we build our land,” and “we belong here.” The message is simple enough to become a chant, especially during a World Cup month when songs, flags, jerseys, and public screens become part of the same national mood.
That is what makes the release feel strategic. Morocco is not entering this World Cup quietly. The Atlas Lions arrive with the weight of their historic 2022 semifinal run, the expectation of millions of fans, and a brutal opening test against Brazil.
RedOne’s football formula returns
RedOne knows this territory well. The Moroccan-Swedish producer has repeatedly worked at the intersection of pop music, national image, and global football. FIFA has previously highlighted his role in entertainment programming around major football events, underlining his experience in building music moments for international audiences.
With “Stay Up High Morocco,” he returns to a familiar formula: a big hook, a cross-border collaboration, an easy stadium rhythm, and a message built around pride rather than complexity.
Toofan’s presence adds another layer. The Togolese duo brings West African pop energy to the song, helping the track feel continental rather than narrowly national. That matters because Morocco’s World Cup story is also an African story. After becoming the first African and Arab team to reach a World Cup semifinal in 2022, Morocco now carries wider expectations into 2026.
Why the song is catching fire
The song is gaining attention because it hits several emotions at once. It gives Moroccan fans something to play before matches, something to share online, and something that matches the confidence around the national team.
The visual style also matters. The video avoids a traditional patriotic template and instead leans into modern styling, glossy lighting, and a pan-African party mood. It feels built for YouTube, TikTok, fan edits, cafes, and pre-match gatherings.
Morocco’s Group C schedule makes the release even more charged. The first match against Brazil is one of the tournament’s early headline fixtures, while the Scotland and Haiti games could decide whether Morocco reaches the knockout stage.
In that setting, “Stay Up High Morocco” is less about introducing a new song than setting the emotional temperature before kickoff.

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