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New > Nav > ‘Wanted You’ ft. Lil Uzi Vert > listen here
GRAMMY Award-nominated, platinum-certified Toronto rapper and producer NAV releases his new single, ‘Wanted You,’ featuring Lil Uzi Vert.
Produced by Nav himself, DJ Khaled, Ben Billionsand Cash of XO. Further production credits from Nav includes Drake’s 2016 Grammy nominated smash, ‘Back To Back’.
‘Wanted You’ sees Nav and Uzi Vert rap about romance regrets and a relationship gone bad. The track unites NAV and Lil Uzi Vert for the second time in 2017, following up the hit ‘A$AP Ferg’ taken from Nav and Metro Boomin’s collaborative project ‘Perfect Timing’ released earlier this year.
Watch the animated vertical video below.
‘Wanted You’ ft. Lil Uzi Vert is available to buy and stream now.
We Speak Music
jqime Reveals New Single ‘talk to me’
“talk to me” operates in the liminal space between articulation and impulse, where emotion precedes language and meaning is often retroactively assigned. jqime’s latest single frames adolescent experience not as a series of grand revelations, but as a sequence of half-understood interactions, moments defined as much by what isn’t said as by what is.
The decision to filter the song through three perspectives introduces a subtle fragmentation, reinforcing the central theme of miscommunication. Rather than offering narrative clarity, the track leans into dissonance, emotional, not sonic, allowing each viewpoint to exist in quiet contradiction. It’s an approach that mirrors the instability of its subject matter, where certainty is perpetually deferred.
Musically, the band situate themselves at the intersection of synth-pop sheen and indie rock elasticity. The arrangement is deceptively simple: bright, cyclical synth lines underpin a framework of guitar-driven momentum, creating a sense of forward motion that never fully resolves. There are echoes of past influences embedded in its structure, but they function more as reference points than destinations.
What distinguishes “talk to me” is its relationship to space. Despite its upbeat exterior, the track leaves room for hesitation, in the phrasing, in the pacing, in the gaps between lines. This restraint prevents it from collapsing into pure nostalgia, instead allowing it to hover in a more ambiguous emotional register. It’s less about recreating youth than about interrogating how it feels in retrospect.
In this sense, jqime’s youth becomes both context and counterpoint. Their proximity to the experiences they depict lends the song immediacy, but there’s also an emerging self-awareness in how those experiences are framed. “talk to me” doesn’t attempt to resolve its tensions; it simply inhabits them, suggesting a band more interested in asking questions than offering answers.
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