JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 73rd anniversary of Luther Vandross’ birth.
Category: R&B
Throwback: Happy 78th BIrthday, Al Green!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Al Green’s 78th birthday.
New Video: Berlin’s Nando the Native Shares a Tale of Heartbreak and Betrayal
Nando the Native is an emerging Nicaraguan-born, Berlin-based R&B/indie pop artist, whose career started in earnest as a member of acclaimed, award-winning R&B outfit A Song For You, led by Noah Slee. And as member of A Song For You, the Nicaraguan-born artist has shared stages with the likes of JOVM mainstay Nick Hakim, Kelvyn Colt and Annahstasia while collaborating with Carhatt, Dr. Martens, and Levi’s.
The Nicaraguan-born, Berlin-based artist stepped out into the spotlight as a solo artist. His music as a solo artist serves as a genuine reflection of his innermost thoughts and emotions, inviting listeners into his world with raw honesty and vulnerability. Although he cites Frank Ocean, Miguel and a list of other artists as influences on his overall sound and approach, having grown up straddling two contrasting cultures have informed his vocal and musical versatility while being a testament to wholly embracing one’s own identity.
Rejecting the confines of traditional labels and genre boundaries, the Nicaraguan-born, Berlin-based artist has forged his own path, creating music that draws from his heritage and the cosmopolitan energy of Berlin’s rich creative scene.
In a relatively short period of time, Nando the Native has made a name for himself in the Berlin R&B scene through collaborations with a collection of local and international artists and producers including Jonny Wood and Axel Benamar.
Released last month, his six-song solo debut EP Nothing But A Lesson thematically touches upon the complexities of heartache, toxic relationship, love, fetishization and more. The effort sees Nando the Native pairing poignant, lived-in lyricism with velvety-smooth production while showcasing an old-school inspired vocal prowess and attention to craft. “Nothing But A Lesson is a collection of songs I wrote during a time I was still learning how to set boundaries in relationships,” the Berlin-based artist explains. “This EP is a little reminder for me not to fall into something toxic again.”
Nothing But A Lesson‘s latest single “Honest” is a vibey bit of R&B anchored around a production featuring skittering beats and a looping arpeggiated acoustic gutter sample serving as a lush, satiny bed for the Berlin-based artist’s soulful, heartbroken croon. Written from the lived-in perspective of someone who has been fetishized for being of color, the song addresses the fetishization of BIPOC folks from whites and others, who fixate on the seeming exoticness of someone’s ethnicity or skin color — and not on who they actually are as a person. And throughout the song’s narrator expresses a sense of betrayal, hurt and confusion, as well as the sense of foolishly taking part in their own fetishization.
The accompanying video as Nando the Native explains portrays the situations described in the song: The love interest in the video seems to get off on having Nando speak Spanish all the time, but for the rising artist, there’s a sense that he feels a bit like an accessory. Later, we see the same girl at a party full of BIPOC folks, flirting with another guy. Towards the ends of the night, she’s calling Nando but little does she know he knows she’s up to no good.
Throwback: Happy 55th Birthday, Mariah Carey!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Mariah Carey’s 55th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 74th Birthday, Teddy Pendergrass!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates the 74th anniversary of the birth of Teddy Pendergrass.
Throwback: Happy 80th Birthday, Diana Ross!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Diana Ross’ 80th birthday.
Throwback: Happy 82nd Birthday, Aretha Franklin!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Aretha Franklin’s 82nd birthday.
Throwback: Happy 71st Birthday, Chaka Khan!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Chaka Khan’s 71st birthday.
New Audio: Baltimore’s Devin Nash Shares a Sultry Club Banger
Devin Nash is a Baltimore-born and-based singer/songwriter and musician, who quickly established a sound that blends contemporary R&B and 80s synth pop with the release of his full-length debut, 2016’s Her.
Her achieved commercial success with the album’s songs appearing on VH1’s Black Ink Crew Chicago and MTV’s Teen Mom — and he performed at the BET Awards.
Nash’s forthcoming EP Pretty.Sexy.Love reportedly features material that channels Frank Ocean, Miguel and others, while giving listeners “a genuine outside-the-box soul transformation” — with a soulful sophistication. The EP’s latest single “Swayze” is a sleek, club friendly banger featuring glistening synth arpeggios, skittering beats paired with the Charm City-based artist’s soulful delivery and uncanny knack for a catchy hook. While seemingly channeling Usher, Miguel, Frank Ocean and Steven A. Clark‘s Fornication Under Consent of the King, “Swayze,” tells a story about a guy who fell for the wrong girl and having a difficult time moving past it — to the point that he’s obsessed with both the girl and the heartbreak as a result. Lyrically, the song seems rooted in the specificity of lived-in experience.
New Audio: Marie Dahlstrøm Shares a Shimmering Meditation on Vulnerability and Accountability
This week will be an extremely busy week: I’ll be covering the 2024 New Colossus Festival. Over the course of the next five days and four nights, I’ll be catching an eclectic array of bands across Manhattan’s Lower East Side. So understandably, my posting — both here and on social media — may be a bit sporadic until the festival’s conclusion on Sunday. But in the meantime, there’ll still be a handful of scheduled posts for your enjoyment.
Over the course of the last handful of years, the Roskilde-born, London-based singer/songwriter, musician, producer and JOVM mainstay Marie Dahlstrøm has developed and honed a reputation for being one of the most prolific and acclaimed artists in contemporary, indie/underground R&B.
The JOVM mainstay’s third album, last year’s A Good Life was a deeply personal album that was informed and inspired by the recognition that she contained multitudes, thousands of different selves co-existing and contradicting each other — simultaneously. For the Danish-born artist, she’s an acclaimed singer/songwriter and producer. Producer Dan Diggas‘ romantic partner and creative collaborator. A mother, and on and on.
“These different pockets of life also create friction,” she acknowledges. “I’ve been figuring out where I belong, what I’m supposed to do and how I fit into all of this — because I am so much more than an artist. When you have big dreams or goals and you see time being taken away from achieving them, and going towards something else — how do you make that a positive experience? There are always challenges, but that doesn’t mean it’s not a good life.”
Fittingly, A Good Life thematically explores dismantling the long-held idea that your validity as an artist somehow diminishes when it’s not the focal point of your life and that somehow being a parent negates creativity. Of course, that can be said for artists, who have to support themselves and their creative endeavors with a day job not even remotely related to their passions.
The album also featured collaborations with Jay Prince, Kofi Stone, Cory McKenzie Tribbett, Delleile Ankrah and Sipprell among a list of others, and production from Conor Albert and her partner Dan Diggas.
A Good Life Deluxe is slated for release next week. And the deluxe edition will will feature two previously unreleased tracks, as well as two new remixes and reworks of album tracks “If I Belong” featuring contributions from Samson Jatto (drums) and Jay Asafo (bass) and “Now my Own,” featuring frequent collaborator, London-based rapper Aligo.
“Nothing On You” feat. Odeal, one of the previously unreleased tracks, is a song anchored by a shimmering, looping guitar line, reminiscent of The Isley Brothers‘ “Footsteps In The Dark,” a sinuous bass line and a swaggering four-on-the four, atmospheric synths and twinkling bursts of keys an driven by Dahlstrøm’s and Odeal’s yearning yet effortlessly soulful and gorgeous solos and harmonies. While sonically being a remarkably contemporary bit of neo-soul tinged R&B, the song thematically harness back to classic soul — a sweet and earnest longing and desire for a deeper, sustainable connection with that special significant other.
“This song was made in the very first session Odeal and I had together. It was such a natural and smooth process,” the acclaimed JOVM mainstay explains. “Daniel’s production provided the perfect foundation and it felt really natural to develop the song. The song is a true love song – feels like a nice way to start the year.”
The album’s second previously unreleased single “Glass” features a lush and soulful arrangement of twinkling and celestial synths, a swaggering groove-driven four-on-the-floor and squiggling bits of funk guitar paired with Dahlstrøm’s gorgeous and soulful vocal. While channeling early 90s R&B and hip-hop soul — Mary J. Blige, 702, 112 and the like — the song sees Dahlstrøm reflecting on vulnerability and accountability, from the perspective of hindsight and bitterly hard-won wisdom.
“Glass is written from a retrospective angle, reflecting on past mistakes,” Dahlstrøm says. “It’s a song about accountability. I hope this song will allow people to feel vulnerable and open up – even about their own flaws.”
New Video: Emerging Nigerian Artist Rukmani Shares a Swaggering and Much-Needed Call to Unplug
Rukmani is an emerging Port Harcourt, Nigeria-born and-based R&B artist, who prides herself in sharing her unvarnished life stories, feelings and thoughts through her music.
Released a few weeks ago, the Nigerian artist’s latest single “No Social Media” is a slickly produced, hook-driven bop featuring soaring and cinematic bursts of strings, skittering boom bap, squiggling funk guitar, a supple bass line and a supple bass line serving as a lush bed for the emerging Nigerian artist’s swaggering and self-assured delivery, which sees her alternating between spitting bars and soulful crooning. “No Social Media” is rooted in a bold, much-needed message for all of us: stop doomscrolling, unplug from the apps, embrace your true self and reject the pressures to be airbrushed perfect.
More than that just ditching the apps, “No Social Media” is also a call to snatch back your time, your energy and your voice — and to create a space for genuine connection and for chasing dreams that really move you, not just amassing likes. “This isn’t just a song; it’s a movement,” says Rukmani. “I want this to inspire people to break free from the shackles of online validation and embrace their true selves, flaws and all. You are enough, just as you are.”
Directed by Planetsbb, the accompanying video follows the emerging Nigerian artist through an eerily empty amusement park.
Throwback: Happy Black History Month: James Brown
JOVM’s WIlliam Ruben Helms celebrates and closes out Black History Month with James Brown.
Throwback: Black History Month/Happy Belated 96th Birthday, Fats Domino!
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History — and belatedly the 96th anniversary of Fats Domino’s birth.
Throwback: Black History Month: Luther Vandross
JOVM’s William Ruben Helms celebrates Black History Month and pays tribute to Luther Vandross.
