Jessie Reyez Keeps Speaking Her Mind

Photo: Philip Harris

BY Ryan B. PatrickPublished Nov 25, 2018

"There is a quote that someone told me years ago —  fuck I can't remember who it was — but they said that creativity is abundant. If it's for you, no one can take that away," Jessie Reyez tells Exclaim! over the phone.
 
For the Toronto-based singer-songwriter, it's not about shock value when she uses profanity in her songs or in her real-life. She's not going to be any other way.
 
Since dropping "Figures" a couple years ago and her debut EP Kiddo in 2017, the road to success for Reyez has been a path forged by an unflinching take on R&B, soul, pop and blues, an unfiltered public persona and an unadulterated mix of humility, bravado and emotion.  
 
Whether it's working and writing with names like Eminem, Calvin Harris or Dua Lipa or just kicking back with her friends and Colombian-born parents — authenticity is the life she's maintaining. "There are a lot wiser than I am and they help with perspective and staying grateful," she says of her immigrant parents.
 
New seven-track EP Being Human in Public is the latest salvo with this mindset, each song a variable mix of sexual, emotional and intimate energy. 
 
"You just need to create and be open with that energy. The second that you are precious with it, it's almost like you showing the world you have a limited amount."
 
Putting out an EP at a time when people might be clamouring for a full-length was an intentional thing, she notes.
 
People today are too busy scrolling past clips and information on their timeline, she muses, so it's about getting them to experience her songs, one at a time.
 
"I've been debating with people over an album actually means in 2018. Certain artists who have paid their dues and proven themselves have almost the privilege to put out a full length album," she says.  "I still feel like I'm proving myself. I like to get to the point I can say, 'It's album time,' and have gained or earned that musical respect where someone is going to give that project that respect."
 
So, she explains, there are some songs on the EP that are less than a few months old — and then there are some songs that are a little more seasoned.
 
"It's about being human on an intimate level. Saying things that you normally don't say publicly. Things that people feel in their bedrooms but won't say at their workplace or in public," says Reyez
 
"It is still very much real, you know? These songs are just honest as fuck."

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