RnB Music (feat. Kendrick Lamar)
Terrace Martin
Terrace Martin strips things back here, letting the groove breathe with more warmth and directness than some of his denser arrangements. There's a smoothness that nods to classic 90s R&B production — the era of polished Trackmasters beats and lush Babyface balladry — but Martin modernizes it with a jazzier harmonic vocabulary and crisper textures. Kendrick Lamar appears not in full aggressive poet mode but looser, more conversational, allowing the production's gentle insistence to guide his delivery. The song functions almost as a love letter to the genre itself, an acknowledgment of how R&B shaped the emotional vocabulary of a generation, how it provided language for desire and heartbreak and joy when nothing else quite fit. There's a nostalgic ache running through it without tipping into pastiche — Martin knows this territory too well to merely imitate it. The vocal production feels warm and close, like the song was recorded late at night with the lights low. It rewards those who grew up with smooth 90s radio as a kind of emotional compass, offering something simultaneously familiar and more complex than memory usually allows.
slow
2010s
smooth, warm, intimate
Los Angeles, USA — 90s R&B and West Coast jazz-soul
R&B, Jazz. Neo-Soul / Smooth R&B. nostalgic, romantic. Starts warm and familiar, building into a loving, slightly aching tribute to the emotional vocabulary R&B gave a generation.. energy 4. slow. danceability 5. valence 6. vocals: loose conversational male rap, smooth R&B warmth, intimate late-night delivery. production: jazz harmonics, warm bass, polished but understated, close vocal production. texture: smooth, warm, intimate. acousticness 4. era: 2010s. Los Angeles, USA — 90s R&B and West Coast jazz-soul. Lights low, late at night, when you want something that feels like emotional memory made sound.