“Shutter Speed” Song Lyrics Meaning | Imani Lenz
Imani Lenz dives into Shutter Speed, a high-energy reflection on momentum, mastery, and moving with intention in both filmmaking and life.
Listen to “Shutter Speed” song on: Spotify | Apple Music | YouTube Music
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Camera Rolling
Verse 1:
I was cleaning up my set, it was a little messy
I had models everywhere, they was all flexing,
Hit me up for the price, I can’t do the texting
If I’m shooting on my phone, I won’t never answer
Click click next scene, hop up on the dresser
Tryna book me for the low, I ain’t going lesser
Oh you flexing for the gram, it ain’t that impressive
Make sure you tag me on the post, give me camera credit
Zooming with these lenses, like some jet skis
Maxing out these cards, I’m so camera-ready
Camera head so big, man I got a headache
Rigging up my rig, gotta keep it steady
I’ma point and shoot that content for the win
No, you wasn’t filming with me in the gym
I do this for the team and my camera kin
Shoutout to the crew and my camera friends
Hook:I got cameras loaded on me and they all Black,
I got my camera young-ins with me and they all snap
I can’t listen to you talking all that lens cap!
If we shooting movies, give me my director hat
Me and you we ain’t the same, I’m on another level
I can teach you about this game, you can’t never settle
Racing with my camera, like we winning medals
I got shutter speed, watch me press the pedal
Verse 2:Keep it litty for me please turn up all the lights
We got them LEDs on scene and they all bright
My camera crew in all Black, like the dark night
Dolly in, get the shot, make sure your focus right
I been shooting making shows, I’m a real shooter
I’ma soldier on set, I’ma real trouper,
Now we ballin on the scene like some real hoopers
All these cameras ain’t the same, please don’t let them fool ya
Words don’t make no sense let’s rewrite the script
We control the game that’s a pro tip
They was tryna pay us on the super low end
Now we got the whole bag, not a portion
I’m just tryna make a wave in this ocean
Keep my content on game, talking no slips
Now you want to ride our wave, we got a whole ship
Keep that camera rolling boy, we in motion
Hook:I got cameras loaded on me and they all Black,
I got my camera young-ins with me and they all snap
I can’t listen to you talking all that lens cap!
If we shooting movies, give me my director hat
Me and you we ain’t the same, I’m on another level
I can teach you about this game, you can’t never settle
Racing with my camera, like we winning medals
I got shutter speed, watch me press the pedal
Shutter Speed: Moving With Purpose, Not Permission
Shutter Speed is one of those songs that feels fast on the surface — camera references, motion, momentum — but underneath, it’s deeply intentional. It’s about movement with meaning, knowing your value, building community, and choosing to create from alignment rather than pressure.
This song sits at the intersection of craft, culture, and consciousness. It reflects a moment where music, videography, leadership, and purpose all converge.
Below, Imani Lenz breaks down the meaning behind Shutter Speed, line by line — not as flexing, but as reflection.
Readiness Over Chaos
“I was cleaning up my set, it was a little messy / I had models everywhere, they was all flexing”
These opening lines aren’t about disorganization — they’re about being in motion. The “messy set” represents an active creative environment where things are happening at once. Creation isn’t sterile. It’s alive.
This moment reflects real production energy: people moving, ideas overlapping, moments unfolding quickly. The mess is proof that something is being built.
Knowing Your Worth Without Shame
“Hit me up for the price, I can’t do the texting / Tryna book me for the low, I ain’t going lesser”
This section speaks directly to creative boundaries.
Knowing your worth doesn’t mean rejecting opportunity — it means choosing alignment. The song makes space for nuance: sometimes a lower-paid project is worth it if it brings joy or fulfillment. Other times, it costs too much energetically.
The line isn’t rigid. It’s conscious.
Credit Is Currency
“Make sure you tag me on the post, give me camera credit”
This lyric highlights something simple but powerful: recognition matters.
Credit isn’t about ego — it’s about visibility, respect, and ecosystem health. When creators are credited properly, it allows their work to travel further and creates trust within collaborations.
It’s a reminder that ethical creation includes acknowledgment.
Integration, Not Fragmentation
“Zooming with these lenses… rigging up my rig / I do this for the team and my camera kin”
Here’s where the song starts revealing its deeper core.
This isn’t just about gear. It’s about integration — music artist, videographer, founder, community builder — all existing in the same body, at the same time.
For a long time, those identities felt separate. Shutter Speed marks the moment where they begin to merge into one cohesive expression.
“You Wasn’t Filming With Me in the Gym”
“No, you wasn’t filming with me in the gym”
This line carries weight.
It’s about unseen effort. Quiet preparation. The work done before anyone was watching.
The song isn’t resentful — it’s grounded. It acknowledges that not everyone is meant to be present during the building phase. What matters is knowing your foundation can’t be shaken.
Language as Intention
One intentional choice in Shutter Speed is the absence of curse words.
This isn’t accidental. Words carry energy. Language shapes frequency.
The goal isn’t censorship — it’s amplification. Creating music that feels powerful, clean, and uplifting while still carrying rhythm and edge.
The Hook: Motion With Meaning
“I got shutter speed, watch me press the pedal”
The hook ties the entire song together.
Shutter speed isn’t just a camera setting — it’s a metaphor for decisive action. Knowing when to move. Knowing when to pause. Understanding timing.
This is about momentum that’s intentional — not rushed, not reckless.
Perspective Is Power
“All these cameras ain’t the same, please don’t let them fool you”
This line expands beyond gear.
It’s about perspective. Not all lenses tell the truth the same way. Not all narratives are equal. Question what you’re shown. Ask who’s behind the camera.
True storytelling requires discernment.
Rewriting the Script
“Words don’t make no sense, let’s rewrite the script”
This is one of the most powerful moments in the song.
It challenges inherited narratives — about success, culture, identity, and worth. If the script doesn’t align, rewrite it. If the story feels incomplete, tell it yourself.
This philosophy is central to Imani’s work beyond music.
Making a Wave in the Ocean
“I’m just tryna make a wave in this ocean”
The ocean represents collective consciousness — a vast field of shared stories, experiences, and energy.
The goal isn’t domination. It’s contribution.
A wave doesn’t erase the ocean. It moves through it — creating space for others to ride alongside.
Culture as Collective Ownership
The song ultimately points toward community-owned storytelling — a vision realized through platforms like Black Stock Footage.
It’s about controlling narratives, valuing creators fairly, and preserving culture with care rather than extraction.
Not clout. Not trends. Legacy through intention.
Final Reflection
Shutter Speed is confident, but it isn’t loud. It’s grounded. It moves quickly because it knows where it’s going.
This song captures a moment of alignment — where craft meets consciousness, and creativity becomes a form of leadership.
About Imani Lenz
Imani Lenz is a multidisciplinary music artist, filmmaker, and cultural storyteller whose work centers on perspective, preservation, and lived experience. He is the founder of Black Stock Footage, a platform dedicated to documenting and monetizing authentic Black narratives, and the creator of Film Trips — group content experiences hosted by local creators that blend community, storytelling, and visual culture. Through music, film, and photography, Imani uses the lens as both a creative tool and a vehicle for cultural memory.
Social Media: Instagram | LinkedIn | YouTube
Founder: Black Stock Footage | Film Trips