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Before love came to kill us / Jessie Reyez.

Contributor(s): Material type: MusicMusicPublisher number: B003163502 | IslandSpoken language: English Publisher: New York, NY : Island, [2020]Copyright date: ©2020Edition: [Explicit version]Description: 1 audio disc (46:57) : digital ; 4 3/4 inContent type:
  • performed music
Media type:
  • audio
Carrier type:
  • audio disc
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
Contents:
Do you love her -- Deaf (Who are you) -- Intruders -- Coffin / (feat. Eminem) -- Ankles -- Imported / (with 6lack) -- La memoria -- Same side -- Roof -- Dope -- Kill us -- Love in the dark -- I do -- Figures.
Jessie Reyez ; with accompaniment.
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Holdings
Item type Home library Collection Call number Materials specified Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult CD Adult CD Main Library CD R&B Reyez, Jessie Available 33111009910130
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Anyone familiar with the range Jessie Reyez has shown since 2016 was not taken aback by news that the artist fought the pressure to make her first album a cohesive one. The uncommonly versatile singer and songwriter went multi-platinum in her native Canada with a sparse heartbreak ballad, "Figures." Its parent release, the Kiddo EP, also featured the glass-rattling "Gatekeeper" -- an alarming account of her experience with a sexual predator -- in which she sang from her perspective, and rapped and sang from that of the offender. She has co-written simple love songs like "One Kiss," a U.K. number one, U.S. Top 40 pop hit for Calvin Harris and Dua Lipa, and has also worked with Romeo Santos, Eminem, and Sam Smith. All of this has indicated that Reyez is a complex figure not cut out for unloading unified, easily digestible LPs. Before Love Came to Kill Us simply, if in a deliberately messy way, expands on her EPs, singles, and collaborations. Reyez makes her entrance with "I shoulda fucked your friends" on the adult contemporary quasi-trap ballad "Do You Love Her," and just before the reappearance of "Figures" finishes with a comparably wholesome form of remorse on the gospel-tinged "I Do." The in-between highlights are just as scattered. Reyez uses her voice as a protean instrument -- the settings of which include crooning child, squeaky-swaggering hedonist, high-velocity rapper, and raging Gwen Stefani -- and on the haunted ballad "La Memoria," she sings in her first language. Unsurprisingly, the emotions are varied and unfiltered. Reyez is obsessed enough to "jump off the roof" (the Eminem duet "Coffin"), willing to pledge her allegiance to XXXTentacion's "Fuck Love" ("Deaf [Who Are You]"), steadfast and grateful in the traditional ballad sense ("Love in the Dark"), and assertive in dominance ("Ankles"). That covers less than one-quarter of what Reyez relates here. Although it's all over the place, Before Love Came to Kill Us radiates conviction from front to back, and is without doubt a true representation of its creator. ~ Andy Kellman

Title from container.

Jessie Reyez ; with accompaniment.

Compact disc.

Parental advisory: explicit lyrics.

Do you love her -- Deaf (Who are you) -- Intruders -- Coffin / (feat. Eminem) -- Ankles -- Imported / (with 6lack) -- La memoria -- Same side -- Roof -- Dope -- Kill us -- Love in the dark -- I do -- Figures.

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