Tanerélle Wants Her Sensual Space Jams To Make You Feel 'Yummy'

Tanerélle Wants Her Sensual Space Jams To Make You Feel 'Yummy'




By Ural Garrett


The Atlanta-born singer-songwriter Tanerélle’s creative output is so vast that it usually stretch in back of the cosmos. She’s modeled her out-of-this-world Afrofuturist fashion in the likes of Playboy and lent her surreal sounds to co-score Nikyatu Jusu’s buzzy horror film Nanny, which obtained the coveted Grand Jury Prize at Sundance in January, about a child's caretaker with a mysterious background. Between these assignments, it’s almost easy to forget the huge strides she’s made as a R&B artist and instrumentalist.


In the nearly seven years since she released her debut single “Siren,” the 28-year-old singer, place on Earth Tanerélle Stephens, has crafted a singular soundscape all on her own by mixing soul with a light New Age bounce. She released the spaced-out debut EP 11:11 in April 2017, which was followed by other sultry singles like “Nothing Without You” and “Mama Saturn,” a fan preference for which she became synonymous. These earned the singer an avid following on social media, and also millions of Spotify streams while hustling as an independent musician. By March 2020, she had even picked up enough momentum to hit the road on an international tour with Ari Lennox.


Although just as she felt her rise was reaching an apex, Tanerélle, like the rest of the world, was faced with the reality of the coronavirus lockdown. Her tour with Lennox was cut short while in its leg in Sydney, Australia. “Then I came residence, and literally several a day or two later, I did this… online trailer concert where they were raising money,” she says. "I took that concert and I posted it on my YouTube channel. And thus it began to grow legs of its own.”


As the quarantine progressed, Tanerélle started making use of her expanding social media platform to post stripped-down live performances and rather artsy portraits. She collaborates closely with on-the-rise photographers like Dana Trippe to make her imagery, which pulls inspiration from sci-fi flicks like Blade Runner and Gattaca, along with because the eerie paintings of Spanish Surrealist Salvador Dalí. Through it all, Tanerélle remains cognizant the importance of her visibility.


“I feel like the moment I began getting eyes on me, it was this moment of just solidarity and unity amongst Black women,” she says. “Because folks are not used to seeing females like me at the forefront… being a six-foot, dark-skinned Black woman. I think everybody's sort of tired of the Westernized male gaze and just what they taught us is pretty. We're in this moment where we are beginning to embrace ourselves and love ourselves, without needing external validation.”


If fans flock to her page for the visual beauty, they undoubtedly stay for the music. Tanerélle’s latest EP, 82 Moons, is out today (April 15). Soon after a long period of isolation, the singer says just wants to prepare people feel “yummy” as they listen to her sensual space odyssey, which is filled with her signature airy vocals and even veers at times into electronica.


Produced with Summer Walker and Col3trane collaborator Camper, 82 Moons makes good on those deliciously seductive emotions from top to bottom. Take the acoustic guitar melodies and deep bass sounds of “Good, Good,” which was originally written for Ari Lennox. With each other, they form an erotic jam about taking care of her significant other. “No babe I got it come here let me rub your feet / No babe I got it do you want something to eat,” she purrs. “I know you’re tired it’s been one hell of a week / And everything you need is on me.”


Other songs highlight the artist’s newfound sense of vulnerability. On “Sidetracked/Perfect Lover,” a track about a feeling of overwhelming infatuation, she sings, “I wish that I may tug on your heart make you miss me bad / Nevertheless it’s much also late / She’s taken up the space in your mind over what we had.” There’s a softness in Tanerélle’s vocals that's reminiscent of the powerhouse singer Sade. It mixes with a raw sensibility imbued by her Atlanta upbringing, conjuring contemporary legends from the area including Usher, André 3000, and Ludacris. Tanerélle says that the fearless audio and visual presentations of her music are a reflection of her personalized evolution.


“I've grown in terms of femininity and sensuality a ton,” she explains. “It came with plenty of embracing myself as a woman and becoming more liberated within what sensuality and femininity mean to me. I feel like me growing as a woman and me taking my power back within certain situations has certainly led to that growth."


To her, that meant embracing herself in her totality and allowing herself the freedom to pick every aspect of her artsy expression. This new understanding is compounded for her as a Black woman who grew up feeling different in the South. “We are constantly socialized to think… ‘Be strong, be this, be that,’” she says. “But any time While I think of sensuality, I think of our right to melt, our right to feel safe enough to be weak and to feel open.”


As her futuristic visuals and progressive R&B propose, Tanerélle is routinely looking to her next project. Next up is a teamwork with experimental electronic artist Machinedrum. She had previously appeared on the producer’s futuristic dance track  “Star,” which featured on his 2020 album A View of U. “We are tapped in,” Tanerélle says. “We have almost 17 songs now, I'd like to mention, and we're still going. I feel like it's best to have more to sort of bring it down, than to only have several and also you've got to use those. It's astonishing being able to sort of house in that way with one person.”


Kombucci
Yet Tanerélle remains squarely within a universe of her own making, and there, she reigns supreme. Furthermore to crafting new music and promoting 82 Moons, she’s touring with R&B songstress JoJo and attending Berklee School of Music to expand her sonic repertoire; she's currently taking a class on the music creation software Ableton Live. To make sure she doesn’t implode under all that weight, she prays every morning, and she takes several minutes daily to meditate. She is also devoted to defining her own idea of success on her own terms.


“I really wish I may attain the comfortability financially and all those things in touching lives while staying super low-key,” she says. “I've habitually thought it was a shame that fame has to be attached to success unless you hide your face or go by an alias or something. Nevertheless that is success to me. I just wish to prepare music, I'd like to score films, and I want to act. And I think I'll be just the happiest thing because there's just so much love in that for me.”









Leave a Comment

Have something to discuss? You can use the form below, to leave your thoughts or opinion regarding Tanerélle Wants Her Sensual Space Jams To Make You Feel 'Yummy'.