FEATURE:
Modern-Day Queens
about Teyana Taylor in 2022, where I looked at her 2020 release, The Album. I am revisiting her for Modern-Day Queens as 2025’s Escape Room. It earned a recent GRAMMY nomination for R&B album. Although many might know her best for acting roles. For her performance in Paul Thomas Anderson's One Battle After Another (2025), Taylor won the Golden Globe Award for Best Supporting Actress and received an Academy Award nomination. I want to get to some interviews from last year around her music and the brilliant Escape Room. There are four that I want to include. I will start off with CLASH and their interview from November. Teyana Taylor could have walked away from the industry. One that, as CLASH say, “didn’t deserve her”:
“On the closing track of her new album, ‘Escape Room’, Teyana Taylor’s two daughters, Rue Rose Shumpert and Junie Shumpert, share tender notes of affection towards their mother. “The world loves you so much / Thank you for coming back to music and back to you,” says Taylor’s nine-year-old on a folk-inflected reprise that doubles as a symphonic devotional. “That song makes me tear up every time, it is so special to have them be a part of that song,” an in-demand Taylor tells CLASH in between an intense run of press junkets for her Oscar-baiting performance in the Paul Thomas Anderson black comedy, action thriller and political drama, One Battle After Another.
After releasing her pandemic-era collection ‘The Album’ in 2020, Taylor made the decision to step away from music, her “first love”. Citing burnout, Taylor had insulated herself to the opprobrium she’d received at the hands of a sexist and racist industry, one she’d navigated since her G.O.O.D label debut ‘VII’ back in 2014. Throughout her career, Taylor has been serially overlooked and underestimated, a fact she’s still reckoning with in the midst of a banner year. “Back then there was heavy gatekeeping around who got to be seen or supported and a lot of artists like me, especially young Black women, who had a clear vision for themselves, didn’t want to be put in a box. So it was hard to get your voice heard and be respected,” a weary Taylor reflects.
“At the time I felt really underappreciated, and undervalued, like I was giving my all to this industry since I was teenager and I wasn’t feeling like it was being reciprocated,” Taylor contemplates on all the years she was in survival mode. “I was feeling like the support I was being given, or lack thereof, wasn’t up to par with what I deserved. As artists we pour so much into our projects, and it feels like we are fighting to be seen or taken seriously. I just reached a point where I was tired of fighting.”
Thankfully, the slow burn arc of Taylor’s career is paying dividends now. Taylor is out of her creative fugue state, turning inwards on a downcast but defiant album that mirrors Janet Jackson’s ‘Velvet Rope’ in its revelatory lyricism, slinky grooves and interlude-heavy feel. It’s a study in classic RnB lore; a culmination of a life’s work that has gestured towards moments of greatness but never fully committed to the part until now. Take ‘K.T.S.E’, an austere collection of tracks made with Kanye West in 2018, in what would be deemed the “Wyoming Sessions”. The response was mixed: tracks like ‘Rose In Harlem’ recalled the artfully warped and looped hip-hop samples West loved experimenting with, with Taylor’s prideful homage to her Harlem roots grounding the listening experience in memoir and confession. And yet some critics decried the haphazard, half-baked nature of a record that sidelined Taylor’s uncut spirit and malleable voice.
Still, in the same way Taylor channelled Brandy’s melismatic range or Jazmine Sullivan’s interior sermonizing in her work, this generation’s artists like Coco Jones, kwn and Chloe x Halle, have her to thank for a modern iteration of a genre that can be soft, warm, abrasive, and riddled with contradictions. “We’re reflecting the complexity of real life,” she says. “Now, artists have more power to do things on their own terms outside of traditional structures. We can speak directly to our fans and deliver content to them without barriers.”
The cinematic scope of ‘Escape Room’ – part neo-noir romance, part dystopian thriller – is realised not only by a short film masterminded by Taylor’s auteur-like vision but by spoken-word testimonies from the likes of Taraji P. Henson, Sarah Paulson, Kerry Washington, Issa Rae, Regina King, and Niecy Nash – voices that mirror Taylor’s inner dialogue. “The narrations were a unique way to tie the songs together and it connected to each section of the album,” she explains. “I wanted them to help guide the listening and viewing experience, so the audience had the emotional journey from one song to the next, making sure it was truly cohesive. I intentionally picked the person I thought brought the emotion I needed for each moment. My girls really showed out!”
Teyana Taylor has lived many lives in this industry, shed many skins. She’s at juncture in her career where the industry is mobilising around her and finally catching up to her divinely-ordained talents. The Harlem star is in a high-yield place; she’s set to make her directorial film debut and is currently starring in Ryan Murphy’s soapy legal drama All’s Fair, alongside Glenn Close, Naomi Watts and Kim Kardashian. Earlier this month, Taylor was venerated as Ebony’s Entertainer of the Year. The award saluted the multi-hyphenate artist for “redefining the meaning of entertainer for a new generation.” It’s validation for an artist who has played the long game, and refused to be hemmed in by gatekeepers who too often presented her as fallible and one-dimensional.
We finish our conversation by circling back to the one constant in Taylor’s life: her children. She may have been hardened by the stop-start nature of her own trajectory but in her role as their provider, protector and nurturer, Taylor is encouraging her daughters’ dreams and vocations, be it in media or beyond.
“Experiencing life through their eyes… that’s the best part of being a mother,” Teyana concludes. “As their mom, I love watching them explore their interests and I think it’s important to support them through all the trial and errors of what they want to do in life. It’s a big part of the legacy I want to build for my girls”.
ELLE spent some time with Teyana Taylor in November. A multi-faceted talent who is an artist doing things on her own terms and keen to connect with her fans, I am curious what this year holds in terms of her music and gigs. She will be attending the Academy Awards and is focusing on her acting career. There will be a lot of people who want to see her on the stage:
“On entering a new era
I have a lot of gratitude for how I am able to see all of my prayers answered, all of the tears wiped. It was tough because I said I retired, and I didn’t know what was next. I was afraid, but I wasn’t afraid to take the leap. I’ve always had a strong relationship with God and felt him saying, “Okay, do you trust me? I know you’ve been trusting, but do you really, really trust me? You ready to let me take that teddy bear from you so I can give you something bigger and better?” I told y’all that one day I’m going to be a big director, and [the fact that] that is coming to fruition shows his power.
On releasing Escape Room, following her five-year hiatus from music
I recorded this album on my terms. This is the most vulnerable work I’ve ever done; my label gave me a lot of support and freedom to do that. Sometimes, you’ve got to just shake the table. Some people believed, and some people didn’t believe in the vision I had, and that that made me go harder. Would I have been the same Inez if I didn’t go through that? Would I have been the same Perfidia? Would I be the creative artist that I am today if I hadn’t gone through that break?
On what Perfidia taught her
Perfidia is unapologetically herself, and those are the parts of her that inspire me because I feel, as a Black woman, when we are at that level of confidence, we’re told that we’re too loud. When we say nothing at all, we’re told that we need to stand up. We stay, we’re weak. We go, we’re the problem. I can appreciate Perfidia standing on what she believes in.
On being a Black woman in Hollywood
Well, the hardest part is being a woman in Hollywood. The even harder part is being a Black woman in Hollywood, because I do feel like this is a man’s world. And we have to show who we are as women to be respected in that space.
I do see change happening. I do see more light being shed on women, and I think it’s because we’re busting through the doors, unapologetically us. We’re not giving anybody a choice: you will see us and you will hear us. And if you don’t, we’re going to make you. Seeing women step into our glory and standing 10 toes down in some red bottoms has been amazing. We’re really stomping through, and that’s what I love about being a woman in Hollywood. We’re going to make you hear us”.
Actually, I will end with a review of Escape Room and get to one more interview. “Actress, dancer, director, choreographer, model, mother, superstar… Teyana Taylor is the gold standard”. This is what i-D said at the top of their interview with her. Escape Room was definitely one of the best albums of last year. I have been a fan of her music for a long time. I am excited to see where she heads next. There will be huge acting roles for sure:
“Escape Room moves through the full spectrum of Taylor’s heart, from shadowy lows to vibrant highs. There are achy ballads and heated grooves for slow dancing and crying in the club. Each track is ushered in by interludes narrated by iconic women––including Regina King, Kerry Washington, and Sarah Paulson––who, Taylor says, “have been through it all.” She brings the depths of postnatal depression, divorce, and everything she’s escaped from to reach this point.
Without naming names, she lays out the experience of her divorce in a confessional arc that starts with heartbreak, stumbles into a dizzying rebound era, and ends with her resting in the bloom of something new. “I call it my ombre album,” she smiles. “It’s for lover girls. Being able to take in new love, you start to feel beautiful and seen again. Allowing somebody to kiss your wounds.” It’s been a long journey. In 2018, Taylor thought she was done with music. She had just walked away from everything she’d fought to build since the early 2000s.
The Harlem-raised artist first signed to Pharrell Williams’ label Star Trek Enterprises in 2007 at just 15 years old. In 2009, her debut mixtape, From a Planet Called Harlem, was released, establishing her style as a blend of modern and old-school R&B with elements of hip-hop, creating a unique, soulful sound that fast drew comparisons to the likes of Mary J. Blige. She was described as “bold” and “brash,” spinning the heads of everyone in her orbit with her singular style––from Ye (formerly Kanye West), who would become her collaborator, to Telfar Clemens, walking in his first-ever fashion show.
PHOTO CREDIT: Jason Nocito
When she abandoned it all in 2018, she was signed with G.O.O.D. Music, an imprint of Def Jam established by Ye, which she had been with since 2012. She had just released her sophomore studio album, K.T.S.E., hotly anticipated after 2014’s VII. It had, at the time, all the hype-inducing ingredients for success: produced by Ye, as a part of the “Wyoming Sessions,” following the release of Pusha T’s Daytona, Ye’s Ye, and Kids See Ghosts with Kid Cudi, and Nas’ Nasir. It featured guest appearances from Ye, Ty Dolla Sign, and Mykki Blanco, and additional production credits from Mike Dean, one of the 21st century’s most successful producers whose other credits include Beyoncé, Travis Scott, Drake, and Lana Del Rey.
Rather than the album she’d envisioned dropping, a different, shorter cut hit platforms at only 23 minutes long due to sample clearance issues and last-minute production decisions. “People were like, ‘She didn’t like her album.’ How can I not like an album that I wrote? It was more about the elements that were snatched off of it,” she remembers. The blame could be put on her label—she says she was then unaware that there would be no visuals to support the album and that samples, including Lauryn Hill’s “Lost Ones,” weren’t cleared by the label. “That’s why I felt like I was caged. My whole truth wasn’t on it. It wasn’t getting the push that it deserved,” she explains.
Her follow-up album, definitively titled The Album, was a reaction that swung wildly the other way, running at 23 tracks. She told Entertainment Weekly at the time that she was taking “full accountability, 110 percent on everything I do,” and was fixing “what didn’t work the first time, getting a better rollout, more records, longer records… just giving everybody more.” It was a critical success, featuring guest appearances from major, Hall of Fame artists—Erykah Badu, Lauryn Hill, Future, Missy Elliott, and more. Instead of sitting with her success following the release, Taylor announced her exit from music on Instagram Live. She asked Def Jam to end her contract with the plea: “I can’t let this kill me.”
“What we doing, God?” she remembers asking, when she found herself pleading to be released from her record label contract. What came back was clarity and spiritual confirmation. “I focused on what was dead smack in front of me. I wasn’t going to sit there and be upset about what’s in the past or what hurt me.” Despite her split from Ye’s imprint, she’s still with Def Jam. What’s different this time around? “Me blowing up on their ass,” Taylor says, straight like that. “Now it’s on my terms. I’m not your artist, I’m your partner.” Besides, Taylor has other options”.
I am ending with a positive review for the brilliant Escape Room. Let’s go back to CLASH and their take on Escape Room. Perhaps Teyana Taylor’s best album to date, if you do not know her music then make sure that you check her out. Many might primarily know her for her acting. However, as an artist, she is someone that you will want to follow:
“Her first new music in five years, Teyana Taylor taps into RnB’s golden age on her labyrinthine audio-visual experience ‘Escape Room’. Blurring the lines between music, cinema, and narration from the likes of Taraji P. Henson, Sarah Paulson, Kerry Washington, Issa Rae, Regina King, Niecy Nash and more, ‘Escape Room’ charts the aftermath of Taylor’s divorce and her awakening after a period of creative ennui. The Harlem star turns inwards on a downcast album that mirrors Janet Jackson’s ‘Velvet Rope’ in its interior sermonizing, slinky grooves and interlude-heavy, episodic feel.
Of an album produced under the banner of her all-female production company The Aunties, Teyana shared: “Escape Room isn’t just a film or an album, it’s a world I built to live in, bleed in, and heal in. I poured my heart into every layer, from the story to the sound, to capture that journey we all take through the shadows of heartbreak, whether that’s love lost, friendships broken, dreams deferred and guide you toward the lightness of healing.“
Throughout, Taylor explores the full gamut of post-heartbreak disorientation; she’s despondent, she’s hollow, she’s scared to fall in love until she isn’t. Perhaps no track captures those festering contradictions than ‘Back To Life’, which begins as a tearstained lament before transitioning into an elastic ballroom anthem – which Taylor is no stranger to. Even as the spectre of past trauma lingers (Taylor’s documentation of this is less confessional, more considered and art-directed), the discovery of new skin and new love comes through on the bedroom suite – ‘Pum Pum Jump’ with TYLA and Jill Scott, and the Kaytranada-produced ‘Open Invite’, which froths with sass and organic sensuality.
‘Escape Room’ is an adult album about connections forged and lost, of love as a weapon and the root of salvation. Its cinematic scope, realised through spoken-word testimonies, adds colour to Taylor’s real-time processing of emotions after a series of professional and personal setbacks. Album closer ‘Always’, which features tender notes from daughters Rue Rose Shumpert & Junie Shumpert, completes Taylor’s return to self on a folky reprise which pulses on the strength of Taylor’s glazed lyrics and the smoky tenor of her pliable voice.
‘Escape Room’ reverberates with cinematic flair and curatorial focus, but its true strength lies in Taylor’s understanding of the RnB rhapsody through time; the love song that is most effective when it’s spare and submerged. For this reason, ‘Escape Room’ is as necessary as anything Teyana Taylor has ever recorded”.
I do hope that there will be some gigs later in the year. I know many people here in the U.K. will ant to see her. Teyana Taylor major talent who releases phenomenal albums and provides these incredible acting performances. If acting is her main focus, you feel music is her biggest love. You can feel and hear so much of her in Escape Room. One of the greatest modern music talents, after a GRAMMY nomination and acclaim for her album, this is someone who soon could become the biggest artist…
IN the world.
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