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Watch: Kali Uchis performs 'All I Can Say' on 'Kimmel'
Watch: Kali Uchis performs 'All I Can Say' on 'Kimmel'

UPI

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • UPI

Watch: Kali Uchis performs 'All I Can Say' on 'Kimmel'

May 30 (UPI) -- Kali Uchis performed "All I Can Say" on Jimmy Kimmel Live on Thursday. The singer, 30, appeared in a pale pink dress, with a pink bow in her hair and sheer white gloves. Pink clouds appeared on the screen behind her. "No I'm not sorry for the dreams that I dream or the life that I live and that's all I can say," she sang. The song appears on Uchis' album Sincerely, which arrived May 9 and features 14 songs, including "ILYSMIH" which describes her love for her son. Fans commented on the "50s vibe" of "All I Can Say." Other tracks include "Heaven is a Home...," "Sugar! Honey! Love!," "Lose My Cool," "It's Just Us," "For:You," "Silk Lingerie," "Territorial," "Fall Apart," "Daggers!," "Angels All Around Me...," "Breeze!" and "Sunshine & Rain..." Uchis is touring North America through September.

Kali Uchis, UMI, Naomi Sharon, And More New R&B For Hard Truths
Kali Uchis, UMI, Naomi Sharon, And More New R&B For Hard Truths

Yahoo

time09-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kali Uchis, UMI, Naomi Sharon, And More New R&B For Hard Truths

The week in R&B, we're exploring the process behind communicating a hard truth. It's not always rewarding or timely, but remains necessary to honor one's own heart. To soundtrack such emotions, Kali Uchis, UMI, 6LACK, and Naomi Sharon are among those who released new music that reflect these deep feelings. We're also obsessed with recent offerings from Brandon, TA Thomas, Keke Palmer, SAILORR, Jhonni Blaze, Tyla, Honey Bxby, and more. Check out VIBE's top new R&B picks below. Kali Uchis' fifth album, Sincerely, is her most vulnerable work of art yet. As she romanticizes her life since becoming a mother, the LP—written and executive produced by the songbird— weaves together themes of love, healing, and fighting to maintain her peace. Per AP, the singer notes, 'I really did make the music that I needed for my grieving process, for just the place that I'm at in my life right now.' The album has a sentimental touch as well as she immortalized her mother on 'Sunshine & Rain…,' and featured her son's laugh on 'ILYSMIH.' UMI's new duet with 6LACK is a hypnotizing, sultry record that embodies the 'peaceful [albeit] electrifying' energy UMI is known for. Together, they fluidly explore and stress the importance of honest connection and communicating hard truths. The singer explained in a statement, ''HARD TRUTHS' delves into the complexities of self-awareness, the emptiness of materialism, and the importance of genuine connection. Alongside 6LACK, the lyrics explore the contrast between external appearances and internal realities. Emphasizing the need to confront uncomfortable truths about oneself and relationships.' UMI described 'HARD TRUTHS' as her 'reintroduction to the world after a long shadow period of my life.' She added, 'I've purged many parts of myself to understand the core of who I am now. That journey began with me asking myself the very things I sing about in this song … (what matters to me?) So it felt right to start telling my story here.' Naomi Sharon just speaks to your soul and her new EP, The Only Love We Know, is proof of that. The soul-stirring project is a story of acceptance, understanding, emotional maturity, and forward progression. She explains, 'This EP is more about finding happiness within yourself and embracing the positive things in life. Love still plays a role, but now there is a deeper understanding that true love comes from within. If something does not work out, that is okay too. It is about self-love and independence.' Storytelling and melody are safely intertwined and it's easy to get lost within the world she's created. Allow yourself to do so. Keke Palmer is finally telling the full account of what went down behind the scenes with Ushergate 2023 and her now ex-boyfriend. 'This one is personal […] me giving voice to the feelings I buried,' the singer shared on Instagram. 'Sometimes the closure we need doesn't come from a conversation— it comes from being honest with ourselves. That's what this song is. My peace. My clarity. My way of letting go […] I'm not here to play perfect. I'm here to be honest. I'm just here to be Keke.' 'My Confession' is a taste of what may be her most personal album to-date. Tyla is back with her first solo single of 2025. Following the success of her eponymous debut album, the international phenom returns with 'Bliss.' It's a vibrant tune with an air of romance, flirtation, and sensuality. 'Burnin' desire when you/ Throw your arms all around me/ Need to feel all your passion/ You and I create magic,' she sings on the chorus. She first previewed the record at Coachella. When speaking on her new approach to music, Tyla shared, 'I've changed a lot in a short amount of time because I was kind of forced to— with how fast I had to adapt to everything. I don't think it's going to be the same energy at all, especially with what I've started making. It's different, but also still Tyla.' SAILORR's highly-anticipated new album, FROM FLORIDA'S FINEST, is here. The LP is a strong display of wit and honesty that features fan favorites like 'POOKIE'S REQUIEM,' 'DOWN BAD,' and 'W1LL U L13?' and new standouts like the relatable 'SOFT GIRL SUMMER' and the audacious 'UR MOTHER'S SON.' 'I do music to open myself and those I love up to opportunities we wouldn't otherwise have,' SAILORR details. 'In the world of art – we all mesh them together to make the world a better place. With my music, I want to make people feel like, 'Yeah, I can and I will do what I want.'' With her first release in nearly three years, Jenevieve's 'Haiku' is dreamy, tender, and introspective. It's as though she captured the delicate feeling of yearning for someone and put it on a song. It feels like the song you'd hear on Mara Brock Akil's Forever or something similar. It's sweet and endearing— something R&B needs more of. Honey Bxby's '3AM' is the anthem for 'late-night longing.' She feels like a cross between Keyshia Cole and Lil Mo, especially with this record interpolating the latter's classic '4Ever.' The inclusion of Toosii's flavor rounds out the seductive jam and really makes you want to have it on repeat. '3AM' will be featured on her upcoming EP, Raw Honey, out on May 30. Jhonni Blaze is marking her mark on R&B and 'What If I' might be our favorite record of hers thus far. Of the ballad's conception, the singer told VIBE exclusively, 'I got my heart broken on April 1 [and] it took me seven days in real life to just ignore the person and know my worth. In the course of that, I did this video. This song is about 'what if I did it to you, how would you feel? How would you feel if I broke your heart and cheated or misused you?' So, I asked myself how long would it take to get over something like that and are you truly over it?' Think Mary J. Blige's 'Seven Days' or Monica's 'U Should've Known Better.' The visual is just as enticing as the record itself. Brandon's debut album, Before You Go, is a heartfelt, earnest depiction of emotions, heartbreak, and exploration of both one's self and art. With intimate yet sweet tracks like 'You Look Like Love,' 'Right Back,' and 'September,' Brandon embraces 'the complexities of love, the beauty of uncertainty, and the inevitability of change.' Written, recorded, and produced entirely in his home studio, Brandon used many external factors to help mold what Before You Go became and thus, he made a project he will be forever proud of. Blossoming songbird, Miriah Renee has issued the newest 'f**k-around-and-find-out' anthem, aptly titled 'Brand New.' The song breathes new life into 3LW's 'No More' as Miriah finds the strength to overcome toxicity and settling for the bare minimum. 'This record allows me as a woman to flip things a little and talk some s**t,' siad Miriah about the track. 'Usually the s**t-talking is from the guys, so I figured a fun female anthem will be the perfect script-flip on them. The 3LW sample was a no-brainer.' The visual continues to play on the 2000s classic as it simulates the Sims video game. The UK has done it again. Nippa is the newest sensation hailing from across the pond and his new EP, Hope She Hears This, is a warm introduction to his catalog. With songs like the familiar-natured 'Insecure,' the tug 'o war of 'Sum'n Serious' or the weighted 'Unfair,' the crooner gets candid about the emotional complexity behind a fading relationship while blending his take on R&B with nostalgia in a way that makes us want to return for more. TA Thomas is such a welcomed presence within R&B, who's really bringing back the heart of the genre— when it had roots in the church. With his new EP, Southern Soul, the crooner delivers a masterful hybrid of blues, gospel, and soul through tracks like the divine 'Preach,' the lovestruck 'Risky,' and the soulful 'Girl Of Mine.' Of the deeply reverent project, TA explained, 'This project came straight from my roots— from the Delta to your ears. Curated by the Deep South, this EP is all heart, heritage, and Southern Soul […] I remember being a kid, riding with my pops on the weekends, and he'd have Sir Charles Jones' 'Is Anybody Lonely' playing. I didn't even know what Southern Soul was at the time but I felt a deep connection to it! Fast forward to now, and I'm dropping a project that not only honors that sound, but takes YOU my day ones, my supporters on a journey through the music that shaped me into the artist I am today. This is more than music. This is a piece of my heart.' More from Keke Palmer Saves Tina Knowles From A Wardrobe Malfunction Coco Jones, DESTIN CONRAD, Sasha Keable And More New R&B For Hard Launches Keke Palmer Podcast Episode Featuring Jonathan Majors Reportedly Scrapped

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'
Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

San Francisco Chronicle​

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kali Uchis wrote the album she knew her future self would need to listen to. The Grammy-winning artist unknowingly was crafting her own audible remedy. 'I really did make the music that I needed for my grieving process, for just the place that I'm at in my life right now,' she says of the album out Friday. 'Sincerely,' (yes, the title includes the comma) began as a collection of letters to herself, friends and loved ones but took on a deeper meaning as the Colombian American songwriter gave birth to her first child and processed her mother's recent death. The first single, 'Sunshine & Rain...,' includes a clip of Uchis' mother saying, 'Good morning, sunshine.' 'I wanted to immortalize her in the project,' said Uchis. 'I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album.' The 14-track album finds Uchis proudly wearing her heart on her sleeve with songs like 'Daggers!,' where Uchis encourages a close friend to lean into self-love, or 'ILYSMIH,' which includes baby coos at the beginning and was written as she lay in her hospital bed with her newborn. Uchis hopes that after listening to her fifth full album, fans will feel more connected to themselves and more in touch with their emotions: 'I hope it will give them some type of solace." This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. AP: When you decided to step into this album and encompass that world of tenderness and strength, what was your thought process of the themes that you wanted to follow? UCHIS: I'm a very deep feeler. I'm very empathetic. I feel a lot. And I wanted to make a body of work that fully showed that vulnerability and that actually really dug deep into my heart in a way that none of my other albums ever had. I felt like I was ready to do that because I've been making music long enough that I felt that it was that time for me, and then it just so happened that, shortly after working on the album, I became pregnant, which was such a big part of being able to feel even deeper than I ever have. AP: How was working on this album healing for you? UCHIS: It's crazy because a lot of times I feel, and especially with this album in particular, I felt that I really made music that my future self would need, that I didn't realize I was going to need at that time. The album is actually dedicated to my mom. My mom later ended up getting diagnosed, and she's no longer here. ... And so pretty much all of the songs ended up taking on a deeper meaning to me because of that and because of it being dedicated to her. ... At the time, I might not have even realized subconsciously that I was making all of this to heal myself. AP: Is that how you got to the title 'Sincerely,'? UCHIS: At one point, I was like, 'I'm gonna make sure each of these songs is like, this is my letter to the world, this is my letter to this person, this my letter to that, this one to myself.' I tried to really conceptualize in a different way that I never have when making any other album. And then ... when my mom passed, a lot of what I had left from her is letters that she wrote to me, and so it ended up, like I said, just more and more reasons for me to realize that it was the correct title for the project. AP: When you are in that studio space by yourself, what comes first? Is it the melody? Is it the lyrics? How did you specifically craft this album? UCHIS: I never stick to one process, but one particular process that stuck out to me on a lot of the songs was that most of them were written with no music, just songs that came to me. For instance, 'ILYSMIH' — that one literally I was just recovering from labor, my son was sleeping next to me; I was still in my hospital bed when I got this idea for this song and started it, started recording it on my phone, started writing some lyrics down. ... There's one called 'All I Can Say.' I wrote that whole song in the car on the way to the studio. ... I try to just make beauty out of all of my experiences. AP: Fans online were saying 'Sunshine and Rain' is the answer to 'After the Storm.' Do you agree with that and if so how does it feel to now, five albums later, do you agree with the correlation? UCHIS: Thematically, nature is kind of a reoccurring theme in my music because I am so inspired by nature and I feel nature is where God exists and nature is where a lot of my creativity just thrives. I feel like it just happened. Afterwards, I even thought, 'Is this too similar to what I've already done?' But … I just love the things that I love, and I just returned back to those nostalgic elements. I may branch out and try what people think is different sounds. Like on 'Orquídeas,' I did a lot of different genre-bending on 'Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios)" as well, but to me, that's still nostalgic because it's still music I grew up listening to. I return a lot to things that are core memories for me. It's soothing to my nervous system. I'm the person who watches the same episodes of my favorite TV shows over and over again, ... I think that's what makes it beautiful too, is to see the evolution and know that it's still true to me. It's still true to my roots in music and where I started, but an evolved version. AP: What does that mean to you to have your mother's voice be a part of the album? UCHIS: After she passed, one of the first things I did was go through all of the audio messages that she had ever sent me and I was just listening to all her messages over and over, wanting to hear her voice. When I heard that one I just thought of, 'Oh how perfect is this that the song is called 'Sunshine &Rain...,' and she had said, 'Good morning, sunshine.' It was for my son that she sent that message. I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album, considering that it's dedicated to her. I struggled a lot with whether or not I wanted to share because I'm a very, very private person. So I struggled a lot with if I even wanted to share that my mom was no longer here, but I felt I just had to not be afraid of that vulnerability and not pretend like it didn't affect me or didn't have some type of impact on me when it had such a big impact on me and still does. And I wanted to also honor her and honor her life in a way through art that I know that she would have loved and that she would have been proud of.

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

LOS ANGELES -- LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kali Uchis wrote the album she knew her future self would need to listen to. The Grammy-winning artist unknowingly was crafting her own audible remedy. 'I really did make the music that I needed for my grieving process, for just the place that I'm at in my life right now,' she says of the album out Friday. 'Sincerely,' (yes, the title includes the comma) began as a collection of letters to herself, friends and loved ones but took on a deeper meaning as the Colombian American songwriter gave birth to her first child and processed her mother's recent death. The first single, 'Sunshine & Rain...,' includes a clip of Uchis' mother saying, 'Good morning, sunshine.' 'I wanted to immortalize her in the project,' said Uchis. 'I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album.' The 14-track album finds Uchis proudly wearing her heart on her sleeve with songs like 'Daggers!,' where Uchis encourages a close friend to lean into self-love, or 'ILYSMIH,' which includes baby coos at the beginning and was written as she lay in her hospital bed with her newborn. Uchis hopes that after listening to her fifth full album, fans will feel more connected to themselves and more in touch with their emotions: 'I hope it will give them some type of solace." This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. UCHIS: I'm a very deep feeler. I'm very empathetic. I feel a lot. And I wanted to make a body of work that fully showed that vulnerability and that actually really dug deep into my heart in a way that none of my other albums ever had. I felt like I was ready to do that because I've been making music long enough that I felt that it was that time for me, and then it just so happened that, shortly after working on the album, I became pregnant, which was such a big part of being able to feel even deeper than I ever have. UCHIS: It's crazy because a lot of times I feel, and especially with this album in particular, I felt that I really made music that my future self would need, that I didn't realize I was going to need at that time. The album is actually dedicated to my mom. My mom later ended up getting diagnosed, and she's no longer here. ... And so pretty much all of the songs ended up taking on a deeper meaning to me because of that and because of it being dedicated to her. ... At the time, I might not have even realized subconsciously that I was making all of this to heal myself. UCHIS: At one point, I was like, 'I'm gonna make sure each of these songs is like, this is my letter to the world, this is my letter to this person, this my letter to that, this one to myself.' I tried to really conceptualize in a different way that I never have when making any other album. And then ... when my mom passed, a lot of what I had left from her is letters that she wrote to me, and so it ended up, like I said, just more and more reasons for me to realize that it was the correct title for the project. UCHIS: I never stick to one process, but one particular process that stuck out to me on a lot of the songs was that most of them were written with no music, just songs that came to me. For instance, 'ILYSMIH' — that one literally I was just recovering from labor, my son was sleeping next to me; I was still in my hospital bed when I got this idea for this song and started it, started recording it on my phone, started writing some lyrics down. ... There's one called 'All I Can Say.' I wrote that whole song in the car on the way to the studio. ... I try to just make beauty out of all of my experiences. UCHIS: Thematically, nature is kind of a reoccurring theme in my music because I am so inspired by nature and I feel nature is where God exists and nature is where a lot of my creativity just thrives. I feel like it just happened. Afterwards, I even thought, 'Is this too similar to what I've already done?' But … I just love the things that I love, and I just returned back to those nostalgic elements. I may branch out and try what people think is different sounds. Like on 'Orquídeas,' I did a lot of different genre-bending on 'Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios)" as well, but to me, that's still nostalgic because it's still music I grew up listening to. I return a lot to things that are core memories for me. It's soothing to my nervous system. I'm the person who watches the same episodes of my favorite TV shows over and over again, ... I think that's what makes it beautiful too, is to see the evolution and know that it's still true to me. It's still true to my roots in music and where I started, but an evolved version. UCHIS: After she passed, one of the first things I did was go through all of the audio messages that she had ever sent me and I was just listening to all her messages over and over, wanting to hear her voice. When I heard that one I just thought of, 'Oh how perfect is this that the song is called 'Sunshine &Rain...,' and she had said, 'Good morning, sunshine.' It was for my son that she sent that message. I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album, considering that it's dedicated to her. I struggled a lot with whether or not I wanted to share because I'm a very, very private person. So I struggled a lot with if I even wanted to share that my mom was no longer here, but I felt I just had to not be afraid of that vulnerability and not pretend like it didn't affect me or didn't have some type of impact on me when it had such a big impact on me and still does. And I wanted to also honor her and honor her life in a way through art that I know that she would have loved and that she would have been proud of.

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'
Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

Yahoo

time08-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Kali Uchis pours her heart into new album 'Sincerely,'

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Kali Uchis wrote the album she knew her future self would need to listen to. The Grammy-winning artist unknowingly was crafting her own audible remedy. 'I really did make the music that I needed for my grieving process, for just the place that I'm at in my life right now,' she says of the album out Friday. 'Sincerely,' (yes, the title includes the comma) began as a collection of letters to herself, friends and loved ones but took on a deeper meaning as the Colombian American songwriter gave birth to her first child and processed her mother's recent death. The first single, 'Sunshine & Rain...,' includes a clip of Uchis' mother saying, 'Good morning, sunshine.' 'I wanted to immortalize her in the project,' said Uchis. 'I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album.' The 14-track album finds Uchis proudly wearing her heart on her sleeve with songs like 'Daggers!,' where Uchis encourages a close friend to lean into self-love, or 'ILYSMIH,' which includes baby coos at the beginning and was written as she lay in her hospital bed with her newborn. Uchis hopes that after listening to her fifth full album, fans will feel more connected to themselves and more in touch with their emotions: 'I hope it will give them some type of solace." This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity. AP: When you decided to step into this album and encompass that world of tenderness and strength, what was your thought process of the themes that you wanted to follow? UCHIS: I'm a very deep feeler. I'm very empathetic. I feel a lot. And I wanted to make a body of work that fully showed that vulnerability and that actually really dug deep into my heart in a way that none of my other albums ever had. I felt like I was ready to do that because I've been making music long enough that I felt that it was that time for me, and then it just so happened that, shortly after working on the album, I became pregnant, which was such a big part of being able to feel even deeper than I ever have. AP: How was working on this album healing for you? UCHIS: It's crazy because a lot of times I feel, and especially with this album in particular, I felt that I really made music that my future self would need, that I didn't realize I was going to need at that time. The album is actually dedicated to my mom. My mom later ended up getting diagnosed, and she's no longer here. ... And so pretty much all of the songs ended up taking on a deeper meaning to me because of that and because of it being dedicated to her. ... At the time, I might not have even realized subconsciously that I was making all of this to heal myself. AP: Is that how you got to the title 'Sincerely,'? UCHIS: At one point, I was like, 'I'm gonna make sure each of these songs is like, this is my letter to the world, this is my letter to this person, this my letter to that, this one to myself.' I tried to really conceptualize in a different way that I never have when making any other album. And then ... when my mom passed, a lot of what I had left from her is letters that she wrote to me, and so it ended up, like I said, just more and more reasons for me to realize that it was the correct title for the project. AP: When you are in that studio space by yourself, what comes first? Is it the melody? Is it the lyrics? How did you specifically craft this album? UCHIS: I never stick to one process, but one particular process that stuck out to me on a lot of the songs was that most of them were written with no music, just songs that came to me. For instance, 'ILYSMIH' — that one literally I was just recovering from labor, my son was sleeping next to me; I was still in my hospital bed when I got this idea for this song and started it, started recording it on my phone, started writing some lyrics down. ... There's one called 'All I Can Say.' I wrote that whole song in the car on the way to the studio. ... I try to just make beauty out of all of my experiences. AP: Fans online were saying 'Sunshine and Rain' is the answer to 'After the Storm.' Do you agree with that and if so how does it feel to now, five albums later, do you agree with the correlation? UCHIS: Thematically, nature is kind of a reoccurring theme in my music because I am so inspired by nature and I feel nature is where God exists and nature is where a lot of my creativity just thrives. I feel like it just happened. Afterwards, I even thought, 'Is this too similar to what I've already done?' But … I just love the things that I love, and I just returned back to those nostalgic elements. I may branch out and try what people think is different sounds. Like on 'Orquídeas,' I did a lot of different genre-bending on 'Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios)" as well, but to me, that's still nostalgic because it's still music I grew up listening to. I return a lot to things that are core memories for me. It's soothing to my nervous system. I'm the person who watches the same episodes of my favorite TV shows over and over again, ... I think that's what makes it beautiful too, is to see the evolution and know that it's still true to me. It's still true to my roots in music and where I started, but an evolved version. AP: What does that mean to you to have your mother's voice be a part of the album? UCHIS: After she passed, one of the first things I did was go through all of the audio messages that she had ever sent me and I was just listening to all her messages over and over, wanting to hear her voice. When I heard that one I just thought of, 'Oh how perfect is this that the song is called 'Sunshine &Rain...,' and she had said, 'Good morning, sunshine.' It was for my son that she sent that message. I thought it was just a beautiful way to open the album, considering that it's dedicated to her. I struggled a lot with whether or not I wanted to share because I'm a very, very private person. So I struggled a lot with if I even wanted to share that my mom was no longer here, but I felt I just had to not be afraid of that vulnerability and not pretend like it didn't affect me or didn't have some type of impact on me when it had such a big impact on me and still does. And I wanted to also honor her and honor her life in a way through art that I know that she would have loved and that she would have been proud of.

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