blue water road
The first single Kehlani released from *blue water road*, a mournful yet joyful elegy for lost loved ones titled “altar,” immediately signaled a shift for the singer. The deaths of young friends and peers sent them searching for clarity, and the song intends to pass along to listeners the peace they found in that quest. It also marks a bit of a creative shift, both in the production—a cinematic ’80s-esque jam—and in the lyrics. “I think I have always leaned on talking about love...because it\'s the most constant emotion we all experience as people,” they explained to Apple Music\'s Nadeska. “But there are three or four songs on this album that are just about me or about spirituality that aren\'t related to just a relationship.” Indeed, the album does feel different from its predecessors; it isn’t weighty so much as measured. Romances are as passionate as ever, like on the flirtatious “any given sunday” and “up at night” (which feature Blxst and Justin Bieber, respectively). And they still go sour, as on songs like “wish i never” and “more than i should.” But “get me started,” a simmering collaboration with Syd, seeks to communicate through the issues rather than bask in the implosion, while “little story,” an acoustic-guitar-driven ballad, resembles something akin to accountability for failing to show up emotionally. Part of this is the result of the maturation that comes with aging, but another aspect is motherhood and Kehlani’s desire for their daughter to have the kind of music that can anchor a person through the waves of life. It is, in many ways, a return to form, a refined take on the introspection they have always led with. “I can make healing music as a healing person,” they told Nadeska. “I don\'t have to weigh myself down with the expectation that music isn\'t deep if it isn\'t raging or sad.”
Kehlani’s most mature and thematically challenging album is steamy and committed, more eager than ever to bet it all on love. They’ve never sounded more comfortable in their own skin.
Kehlani explores spirituality and sensuality throughout Blue Water Road
The artist's third album is their most lyrically intriguing, as they leave the melancholy of the past to embrace a bright new land
It was Morgan who urged Kehlani to go solo after seeing her on America’s Got Talent - and now she’s sat near the top of the R&B world
Their conversational vocals bend through the album like sunshine through the water
Recording tracks for a prospective deluxe edition of 2020's It Was Good Until It Wasn't, Kehlani determined that the material had the makings of a separate release, scrapped the original plan, and kept rolling until they had an all-new album.
The country star touches on mortality with humour, Let's Eat Grandma and Bloc Party return, and Kehlani shines with stripped-back slow jams