Description


The music of LA-based Sudanese-American artist Dua Saleh (they/them) explores the inner self and the world at large. With their long-awaited full-length debut, a collection of R&B-infused electronic indie-pop songs titled I Should Call Them, they portray the spiritual power, resilience, and joy of love.

Equal parts imaginative and lived-through, it's a statement record only Saleh could make. Across three EPs since 2019, heralded by The New York Times ("commanding"), NPR ("visionary"), and Pitchfork ("ambitious and riveting") — alongside their breakout role in the Netflix series Sex Education — Saleh has deftly fused and inverted genre conventions with a socially conscious style driven by melody, grit, and bravado.

Saleh’s foundation as first a skilled poet and their close ties to the indigenous roots have enriched their music with incredible depth. In 2023, they signed with Ghostly International with the punk-leaning standalone single “daylight falls” and took the cover of Gay Times as their Rising Star in Music honor recipient.

Now squarely at the helm of their first LP — guests include Ambré, Gallant, serpentwithfeet, and Sid Sriram — Saleh shapes their most vulnerable work to date, an apocalyptic narrative informed by environmental anxieties and their experiences as a lover, holding personal truth and hope amidst chaos.

Sonically, the album ushers in a new era for the artist whose boundless sound continues to expand. "It's important for me to heal by being fully myself," says Saleh, referring to the outsized role identity and gender expression play in their process. "I am being honest with myself with this record, this is my story."

They see queer love as an act of defiance, be it figuratively, in the album's storyline, which follows two lovers at the end-of-times, or literally, in the many oppressed cultures around the world. Saleh finds a kindred spirit in serpentwithfeet, who duets with them on the striking, string-backed "unruly."

Throughout I Should Call Them, Saleh is elastic in how they use their voice and tune the scenery to love's sweetness and the moments that challenge it. "want" uses straightforward R&B rock elements to underscore feelings of betrayal and resignation. "pussy suicide" is pure jealousy.

Flanked by a looping guitar riff and moody trap beat, Saleh's delivery adopts different pitches, from low, morphing drawls to high-register raps. They go tender on the Sid Sriram-featuring "time and time again." Saleh says the song reflects someone who "could have been the forever person but we weren't meant to be in this time. We still have this deep bond and, maybe this happens more in queer relationships, we still look out for each other."

On the smooth, surrealist back half highlight "television," they harmonize with Ambré. Gallant guests on "coast," playing the classic R&B counterpart to Saleh's hyper-pop-inspired vocal take. Album closer "2excited" finds the characters in Saleh's story embracing a rapturous love realized as the world crumbles — signaled by a 'Black Metal R&B' blowout of ascending percussion and guitar, saxophone sighs, and guttural cries.

It is ecstasy and dread personified, catharsis for modern times, and a thrilling example of an artist unafraid and thriving.

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I Should Call Them

No Label
Black and White Inkblot
Released11/10/2024Catalogue NumberGI432LPC1
Available from our supplierDispatches Tue 19 May - Sun 24 May
  • Free shipping for Club members or orders over £75
  • Free Click & Collect from our stores
  • Trackable shipping and extra secure packaging to protect your order
Released11/10/2024Catalogue NumberGI432CD
Available from our supplierDispatches Tue 19 May - Sun 24 May
  • Free shipping for Club members or orders over £75
  • Free Click & Collect from our stores
  • Trackable shipping and extra secure packaging to protect your order