In case you havenāt had your fill of African royalty this week (as if), Janelle MonĆ”e dropped in on us today with not one, but two new singles sure to be in heavy rotation over the coming weeks, accompanied by stunning visuals that are already giving us fashion inspiration.
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In āDjango Jane,ā the artist formerly known as Cindi Mayweather reminds us who she is: an African-American queen whose flow is as flawless as her angelic vocals. The visuals for this feminist banger are sure to garner comparisons to BeyoncĆ©ās āFormation,ā as MonĆ”e is flanked by her own cadre of militantly clad women moving in tandem. But the comparisons end there as MonĆ”e spits lyrics like:
Jane Bond, never Jane DoeAnd I Django, never SamboBlack and White, Yeah thatās always been my camoItās looking like yāall gonā need some more ammo
In 3 minutes and 16 seconds, MonĆ”e blazes through this track while barely batting an eyelash. And, of course, she looks amazing while doing it. I personally love seeing her back in her trademark tailored suitsāthis time, in several colors, with coordinating kufis. Iām also betting weāll be seeing more ring-divided braids this spring and summer.
But most striking is how MonĆ”e skillfully reminds us from whence we came, and that the future is indeed black and female. As she says, āHit the mute button, let the vagina have a monologue.ā
But while āDjango Janeā is a banger, MonĆ”e still knows how to serve up a bop, and āMake Me Feelā definitely delivers. Co-starring fellow #Fave Tessa Thompson (in a surprisingly sexy mullet), this Prince-inspired track and video (with an opening scene reminiscent of Purple Rain) is a clear nod to those who have been so curious about MonĆ”eās sexuality. The answer? Presumably, whoever makes her feel good. So what?
In a #ThrowbackThursday-worthy ā80s homage from beginning to end, MonĆ”eāin dual roles as a brunette and platinum blondeāputs the āsexā in sexy, and gives us Madonna-level fashion moments in sheer embroidered pants, head-to-toe rhinestones, leotards that are making this writer run for the gym, and a black-and-white ensemble that reminds us that when it comes to sexuality, maybe everything neednāt be so … black and white.
In MonĆ”eās own words:
Itās like Iām powerful with a little bit of tenderAn emotional, sexual benderMess me up, yeah, but no one does it betterThereās nothing better
Truly, just when we were coming off the afterglow of seeing Black Panther, MonĆ”e just brought us to a new high. We canāt wait to hear the rest of her new album, Dirty Computer, due out April 28.
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