Power Jackson Shares Intimate New Single “Keep You Safe”
Rising Hip Hop and R&B artist Power Jackson has released a new single titled “Keep You Safe,” offering listeners a stripped-back and emotionally resonant look into love, trust, and vulnerability. The track dropped across streaming platforms earlier this week, quietly making its way onto the radar of fans of alternative R&B and minimalist soul.
Built around a repetitive, hypnotic vocal hook—“You know I love you bae / You know I’ll keep you safe”—the song doubles down on intimacy rather than grandeur. Clocking in at just over two minutes, it blends ambient textures with unfiltered vocals, creating an atmosphere that feels confessional and raw.
Power Jackson, known for his lo-fi aesthetic and emotionally charged songwriting, continues his streak of self-produced releases with “Keep You Safe.” The single arrives without a traditional rollout or major label backing, reflecting the artist’s independent ethos and direct-to-listener approach.
Though brief in runtime, the song’s impact lies in its repetition, which plays more like a mantra than a hook. Listeners have responded to the simplicity and sincerity of the track, with early social media comments calling it “soothing,” “haunting,” and “a song for people who need to hear ‘I got you.’”
Power Jackson has yet to confirm whether “Keep You Safe” is part of a larger project, though fans speculate it could lead into an upcoming EP or visual release. For now, the single stands as a quiet statement of care in a genre often defined by grandiosity.
Tarric Confronts the Quiet Collapse on “Lying With You”
It’s easy to talk about love when everything is going right. Tarric ’s new single “Lying With You” is about what happens when it all quietly falls apart—and you stay anyway.
Built on glimmering synth textures and hollowed-out percussion, the track is emotionally raw but musically composed, like a breakup conversation in a perfectly curated gallery space. Tarric doesn’t scream through the pain—he whispers it with precision. “You make me say things I would not do / Cause I’ve been lying with you,” he sings, peeling back the layers of emotional self-distortion that creep into relationships like mold under wallpaper.
This isn’t a revenge song or a dramatic farewell. It’s a self-inventory. A reckoning.
That kind of maturity isn’t new to Tarric, but it’s more distilled than ever. While his debut album Lovesick danced through infatuation and its collapse, Method seems like the inevitable chapter two: disillusionment, clarity, survival. “Lying With You” sets that tone like a cracked mirror—beautiful, fractured, and reflective.
Raised on a diet of The Smiths and Depeche Mode in the American Midwest, Tarric’s taste for melodic melancholy has always been clear. But it’s his ability to adapt those influences into something relevant—and resonant—that sets him apart from his contemporaries. After moving to Los Angeles with barely enough to survive, he built his world from scratch: working behind the scenes at NBC and Fox by day, sculpting his sonic identity by night.
The visual strength of his work, evidenced in videos that landed on MTV, isn't just a bonus. It's a core part of the equation. Tarric makes music that feels like film—romantic, atmospheric, precise.
“Lying With You” carries all that cinematic weight, but without ever feeling overproduced. It feels lonely in the right ways. Uncomfortable in the real ways. And in a world of over-engineered indie pop, Tarric has carved out a lane where vulnerability is the flex.
How Nini Iris Is Redefining Indie Pop With Her New Single “Release Me”
Nini Iris 's new single, “Release Me,” is not designed for passive listening. It demands your full attention—and then it breaks your heart in real time. This is not heartbreak diluted for mass consumption. This is heartbreak rendered in its purest form: intimate, angry, poetic, and unfiltered.
From the opening lines—“You left a hole in my precious soul / After trying to make my heart whole”— Iris sets the tone for what becomes a relentless emotional excavation. These aren’t just lyrics. They’re raw nerve endings set to music.
What separates “Release Me” from the typical breakup ballad is the language itself. There’s no filler here. No lyrical autopilot. Every word feels like it’s been pulled from a real place, sharpened by pain and delivered with an almost spiritual urgency. In “Made me feel lost, lost and unknown / When I finally found who I truly was,” you hear not only heartbreak but the psychic dislocation that comes from having your identity dismantled by someone you trusted.
And then there’s the line that hits like a gut punch: “While I write this song / My countless tears you caused / Wet the journal of my oath / Just like you it’s eternally gone.” That’s not crafted to be catchy. It’s crafted to be remembered. To sit with you at 2 a.m. long after the song ends. It’s the kind of line that makes you stop whatever you’re doing and just feel.
The chorus, too, carries more than melody—it carries resolve: “I won’t let you break me no more.”
It’s not a hook. It’s a declaration. A reclamation of power, delivered not with pop gloss but with trembling conviction.
Nini Iris, who first stunned audiences on The Voice with her dramatic vocal range and fearless song choices, proves with “Release Me” that she’s more than a great voice—she’s a writer. A truth-teller. A lyrical force.
Experience R&B’s Essence: “Coast In Romance” by Shaun Royal
When you hear Shaun Royal ’s "Coast In Romance" — you remember what R&B was always supposed to be about: connection. Intention. Soul.
The track asks you to slow down, to listen, to feel. That alone makes it radical. From the opening lines, Shaun doesn’t waste time with surface-level romance — he gets to the root of what it means to truly be seen by someone. The kind of love he’s singing about isn’t transactional. It’s layered, patient, and real.
His lyrics weave a soft but confident narrative — a man in tune with his emotions, unafraid to express joy, longing, and vulnerability. Lines like “I found out all the ways to speak it” hit different in a world where emotional literacy is still too rare in male voices in R&B.
Shaun’s story is just as compelling. A kid from South Central L.A. raised on Stevie, Tevin, and MJ, now co-founding his own production company and sharing stages with legends. He’s not just writing songs — he’s rewriting what it means to be a modern R&B artist.
The music video doubles down on the intimacy. No gimmicks — just tone, texture, and tenderness. It’s a mood piece. The visuals serve the story, not the other way around.
"Coast In Romance" feels like the start of something deeper. It’s more than a vibe — it’s a signal. Shaun Royal isn’t here to play catch-up with the genre. He’s here to restore its soul.
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