Three albums in, Grammy-nominated R&B singer/songwriter Jazmine Sullivan shows that she is the model of consistency on Reality Show.
Things donât feel right when thereâs a void.  Throughout R&B music, voids occur frequently. Jazmine Sullivan is one of the most soulful, complete musicians of present times. One taste of her voice and itâs difficult to resist being hypnotized and mesmerized by her effortless, immense skill. After five years off, Jazmine Sullivan returns strong with her third album, Reality Show.
âDumbâ
Reality Show opens with a bang with âDumb,â featuring Philly rapper Meek Mill. Sullivan just calls him like she sees him â âI know you know you ainât rightâ â later finding security in her own intellect and read on her manâs dumbness. Maybe it sounds simple, but the soap opera â reality show â Sullivan delivers a spot-on, brilliant opener.
Keeping the ferociousness afire, âMascaraâ opens with quite the salvo: âYeah my hair and my ass fake, but so what?â Keeping things âall the way real,â Sullivan sings on the chorus, âSo I never leave the house without makeup on / I keep mascara in my pocket if Iâm running to the market / cause you never know whoâs watching you / so I got to stay on!â Much like âDumb,â maybe the literalness of âMascaraâ seems simplistic, but the bigger message is one of womenâs insecurities with physical appearance. Therefore, âmascaraâ â both literally and figuratively â make her feel better or atone for insecurities.
Itâs clear on the unapologetic âBrand Newâ that Sullivan has added more âbiteâ to her approach. Still maintaining the soulfulness of her previous work, âBrand Newâ indeed looks to the present â hip-hop infused contemporary R&B â as its stylistic base. Still even as âBrand Newâ has Sullivan expanding her scope, itâs the sharp songwriting and feistiness that truly captivates the listener, as Sullivan writes off people with newfound fame who forget from whence they came. Thereâs no better way to say it than Jazmine does: âWell baby f-ck you and then the new crew that youâre rollinâ with.â
âSilver Liningâ
On âSilver Lining,â Jazmine is looking up, despite the misfortunes and burdens that life can bring. Over vintage sounding production, Sullivan explores different facets of her voice, sometimes residing in her lower register, while also striking gold with her powerful upper register. If much of Reality Show felt like ânewâ Sullivan up until this point, âSilver Liningâ is a throwback to Fearless or Love Me Back.
âIâmma rock this bitch till the wheels fall offâŠâ Whoa! â#HoodLoveâ may sport a hash tag as well as liberal uses of the n- and b-words, but the high-flying diva is clearly âonâ to the nth degree. Both soulful and resolute, Sullivan continues to deliver her point without question. Sheâs gentler in her language on âLet It Burn,â but she continues to assert herself via the combination of strong lyrics and gut-wrenching vocals. âYou feel that fire, just let it burn,â she sings on the memorable, prudent refrain, âThereâs no runninâ when itâs your turn.â
âVeinsâ
âVeinsâ sports one of the most unique âvibesâ of Reality Show. There is a hypnotic quality about it, which is supported by the messaging â one of the âaddictionâ to love. Likened to drug addiction, itâs not a new concept, but its well executed, particularly with the modern, somewhat off-kilter R&B production. If âVeinsâ is arguably âuntraditional,â âForever Donât Lastâ is a return to traditional fare. Not a reinvention of the wheel or the soul script, âForever Donât Lastâ is like Sullivan flexing her guns (biceps of course!).
Going further back in the musical timeline â think 1950s â âStupid Girlsâ is unlike anything in Jazmine Sullivanâs discography. Given her boldness throughout Reality Show, this marriage between ultra vintage and ĂŒber feistiness (isnât that even a thing?) unleashes a brilliant union. Then to further thrill or off-put listeners, she switches gears completely on âStanley,â a neo-disco song that is equally edgy. Like âStupid Girls,â this resembles nothing else from Sullivanâs past.
On âMasterpiece (Mona Lisa),â Sullivan has embraced her beauty and found her confidence and swagger. âEvery part of me is a vision of a portrait of Mona, Mona Lisa,â she sings on the chorus, âEvery part of me is beautiful / and I finally see Iâm a work of art / a masterpiece.â âMasterpieceâ isnât necessarily the preeminent song from Reality Show, but it truly ranks among the most thoughtful. Smartly, Sullivan concludes Reality Show up-tempo, courtesy of the groovy, feel-good âIf You Dare.â
Final Thoughts
Three albums in – specifically five years between album two and album three â Jazmine Sullivan is the model of consistency. Rarely do you find an R&B artist in particular that continues to set her apart from the pack. As different as Reality Show is in comparison to Fearless or Love Me Back, it arrives as equals to those splendid affairs. Home run â by all means.
Gems: âDumb,ââMascara,ââ#HoodLove,ââLet It Burn,ââForever Donât Lastâ &Â âStupid Girlsâ
Jazmine Sullivan âą Reality Show âą RCA âą US Release: 1.13.15
Photo Credit:Â RCA
