New Jersey native Fousheé named her latest album after her grandfather’s land in Jamaica, and this autumn, she’ll bring Pointy Heights to the rest of the world on her first-ever headlining tour.
The former Uproxx cover star will perform songs like “Still Around” and “Feels Like Home” on the tour (presumably along with her Childish Gambino collaboration, “Runnin’ Around,” which appeared on the multihyphenate’s new album Bando Stone And The New World), which begins at the House Of Blues in Dallas, Texas on November 19, and runs through December 2 at the Echo in Los Angeles.
Tickets for the tour go on pre-sale on Wednesday, October 9th at 10 AM local time, with the general sale starting Friday, October 11th at 10 AM local time. You can find more information here, and see below for the full run of tour dates.
Fousheé 2024 Tour Dates
11/19 — Dallas, TX @ House of Blues – Cambridge Room
11/20 — Houston, TX @ House of Blues – Bronze Peacock
11/22 — Atlanta, GA @ The Loft
11/25 — Philadelphia, PA @ Foundry
11/26 — New York, NY @ Music Hall of Williamsburg
11/27 — Washington, DC @ Union Stage
11/30 — San Francisco, CA @ The Independent
12/02 — Los Angeles, CA @ The Echo
Pointy Heights is out now via Trackmasters and RCA. You can find more information about the album here.
Foushee is an incredibly fascinating talent that needs to continue to get more attention. The New Jersey native with roots in Jamaica pretty much combines her eclectic background into her music. You will never hear her not try something new whether it be on a single, project, or feature. On her latest record, Pointy Heights, Foushee is toying around with alternative in so many ways and that’s partially thanks to her varied production team. Steve Lacy is the biggest name here, and perhaps has the most influence on the direction of the sounds. However, there’s also BNYX, Jean Baptiste, Carter Lang, and more.
What’s also fun about this project is the connection that it has. Pointy Heights is a reference to her grandfather. “pointy heights is a mile & a half long area located right outside of old harbor jamaica founded by my grandfather pointy. they called him pointy bc he was pint sized this album is dedicated to him, the fam & the community”. Leading up to the release, Foushee did share quite a bit of it’s brief 10-song 27-minute long tracklist. Four were dropped off from the end of July up until the 11th of this month. Those include “still around”, “war”, “100 bux”, and “feel like home” were all included in the roll out. Again, they all manage to sound drastically different from one another. Across it, you hear elements of doo-wop, alternative rock, and more. See why we and many others are co-signing Foushee’s new release with the links below.
For the past month, Fousheé has been preparing to release her second studio album, Pointy Heights. Named after a stretch of land in Jamaica owned by her grandfather — who was nicknamed “Pointy” for his small stature — the album is dedicated to the New Jersey singer’s roots. After releasing the lead single “Still Around” in July, the former Uproxx cover star followed up with “War,” “100 bux,” and today, “Feel Like Home.” The new song is a dreamy mash-up of alt-rock and doo-wop and pays homage to “the people that truly make a place feel like home.”
Pointy Heights is inspired by a trip back to Jamaica, after which she scrapped all the songs she’d already worked on, starting from scratch with roots reggae, ska, and rocksteady as the baseline for the revamped project, which will feature production from her frequent collaborator Steve Lacy and Karreim Riggins. On her Instagram page, Fousheé explained, “pointy heights is a mile & a half long area located right outside of old harbor jamaica founded by my grandfather pointy. they called him pointy bc he was pint sized 🙂 this album is dedicated to him, the fam & the community.”
Listen to “Feel Like Home” above.
Pointy Heights is due on 9/13 via RCA Records. You can find more info here.
New Jersey native Fousheé — a former Uproxx cover star — made a splash in 2020 when her song “Deep End” was used in a song by Brooklyn drill standout Sleepy Hallow. She released her debut album, Softcore, in November 2022, showcasing a broad-ranging list of influences that encompassed everything from SoundCloud rap to pop-punk. On September 13th, she will follow up with her second album, Pointy Heights, taking inspiration from the reggae she grew up on courtesy of her Jamaican mother. Today, she gave fans an early glimpse of her new direction with “Still Around,” a languid single driven by a rambunctious bassline.
The last time Uproxx spoke with Fousheé, ahead of the release of Softcore, she said of her creative process, “I don’t want to do what anyone expects. I like to keep people guessing.” Anyone who expected her to continue releasing her unique brand of alt-R&B will definitely be caught off-guard by her latest musical shift.
She’s certainly been showing off a wide array of musical directions since her debut, teaming up with a diverse assortment of collaborations that includes R&B star Steve Lacy, experimental rapper Lil Uzi Vert, and multifaceted creative Childish Gambino.
You can listen to “Still Around” above.
Pointy Heights is due on 9/13 via RCA Records. You can find more info here.
Yesterday (July 6), Gambino held a pop-up concert at Little Island NYC to treat fans to what he has up his musical sleeve. During the performance, Gambino was joined by Steve Lacy and Fousheé, who are both reportedly slated to appear on the album.
“Sounds like a heater,” wrote one user about the trio’s unreleased track.
Again, at this point, nothing has been confirmed. But clips shared from attendees seem to confirm a few of the names listed above, including Jorja Smith and Amaarae (Gambino’s upcoming tour opener).
Actor Donald Glover — aka musician Childish Gambino — shared a glimpse of his uber-exclusive Close Friends list on Instagram, and in so doing, may have given fans a clue about his next creative endeavors. The main thing he’s got in the works right now is a film, Bando Stone & The New World, along with its soundtrack, from which he’s dropped one single, “Lithonia.” Perhaps the four names included on his Close Friends are collaborators on one or the other.
The only four people in Donald’s Close Friends are: composer Ludwig Göransson, who has collaborated with Glover extensively in the past between gigs scoring films like Black Panther and its sequel, Wakanda Forever, Creed I and II, and Turning Red, and shows like The Mandalorian; record producer Michael Uzowuru, who’s written and produced for Beyoncé, Frank Ocean, SZA, and Vince Staples, among others (including Gambino); and singers and former Uproxx cover stars Chlöe and Foushée. Glover worked with the former on his show Swarm, while Foushée would be a new collaborator, although her first brush with fame came from a rendition of Glover’s song “Redbone” on The Voice. Just what each of these folks will be doing with Gloverbino remains to be seen, but it’s probably a safe bet they contributed in some way to the Bando Stone soundtrack.
After releasing Bando Stone — the film and the album — on July 19, Glover’s hitting the road for his New World Tour.
Fousheé is without question one of alternative music’s rising stars. Having collaborated with artists such as Lil Wayne, Lil Yachty, Vince Staples, Lil Uzi Vert, and Steve Lacy, there is no denying she is a fresh creative force. The singer, rapper, songwriter, and guitarist blends together several sonic elements into some painfully related music. Her 12-track sophomore project, softCORE, is the perfect showing how her musical genius.
Having already appeared on NPR’s Tiny Desk [At Home] Concert series as a guest of her friend, Vince Staples, the New Jersey native is finally making her solo debut in person at the network’s DC office. Fousheé wastes no time jumping start into “Spend The Money,” which originally features Lil Uzi Vert as her band, guitarist Lilly Graves (who also serves as the musical director), bassist Jake Strade, and drummer Tobias Kelly provides additional support.
Before transitioning to the next song of her setlist, Fousheé takes moment to acknowledge her joy in being there. She shares that it was a long day of traveling from Los Angeles, where she now resides, to NPR’s corporate office, but as she said, “I was raised on the East coast, so it feels good to be back on my home coast.”
Fousheé and her band then transition into her single, “I’m Fine.” The track is a melting pot of alternative r&b and metal as Fousheé graciously flows between her delicate yet endearing vocals to a scary, deeply projected scream. As the song ends, she tells the crowd, “Maybe I’m not fine, but are any of us,” before adding, “And it’s OK to not be fine. It’s all about balance.”
Next on the docket is her breakout song, “Single AF,” and in case anyone is curious, the singer confirms that even though she wrote the song years ago inside of her fourth-floor Harlem walkup, her relationship status remains single as f*ck. Fousheé reluctantly concludes her performance with the track “Candy Grapes.”
Talk about a left turn. On her second album, softCORE, New Jersey singer/rapper Fousheé eschews the moody R&B of her debut, Time Machine, to vent some frustrations about life, love, and current events. Anyone expecting a redux of her breakout “Deep End” wouldn’t be disappointed, just surprised. In just 12 tracks, the New Jersey singer runs the gamut from screaming pop-punk to squeaky-voiced cloud rap, defying categorization and pushing against the boundaries arbitrarily foisted upon Black musicians.
Part of this experimental evolution is the legacy of her upbringing in the suburbs of New Jersey. “Somerville is where I started writing and my dream of being a singer started,” she recalls via Zoom. “We lived at this spot on Cliff Street. It was the coolest shit I’d ever seen. It looked like a castle. We had a sound system with a karaoke mic and a piano with stock sounds. I used to go crazy. I used to throw concerts there. I was writing songs. I put together a group. It was a really grounding place for me. I was dancing, I was singing, I was having a ball.”
While living in Somerville gave her place to start, a later move to Bridgewater was disorienting. Without any other Black kids to relate to, Fousheé felt set adrift to discover who she wanted to be, bereft of the cultural models that can provide a sense of belonging, safety, or security from which to base her future growth. “There wasn’t a lot of cultural examples for me,” she laments. “People would feel kind of weird around me because I looked different and ask me questions about being Black, like, ‘Why your hair look like that?’”
This sense of ostracization became both a gift and a curse. While her surroundings led to a relatively narrow musical education, her influences wound up being what you might call “well-rounded” simply from exposure to an alternative viewpoint. “I was in this lyrical poetry class actually where it was all about Bob Dylan and didn’t know who it was and I was really frustrated,” she says. “And now I appreciate it.” The influence of the more folksy side of music is evident in the slower moments of softCORE such as the album’s closer, “Let U Back In” and “Unexplainable,” with often more abrasive examples elsewhere in the set.
softCORE is peppered with aggressive songs like “Bored,” “Supernova,” and “Die,” which lean heavily on the pop-punk influences Fousheé picked up on Z100 as a teenager at the turn of the millennium. “I tried to take the type of topics that I would hear in hip-hop and rap and put it in a punk setting,” she explains. “I just tried to make it honest, talk about how I feel, have it more like stream of thought.” As far as why she chose to go with the hardcore aesthetic after making her debut with a much more elegant, gentle style, she says that metal and punk fit the content, themes, and feelings she wanted to convey.
“I was tired of crying to these slow guitar songs, and I wanted to rage and have fun when I perform,” she expounds. It started from me just expressing anger, and that’s one of the best foundations on which to express that type of emotion. Metal and punk is so carefree and so releasing. And I wanted that for my audience, too. As a Black woman, we don’t get to express those feelings a lot without it being shunned in a music setting. You don’t see that many Black women raging. There’s Rico [Nasty], and way back, Kelis, but it’s so few and far between that I think more of us should and we all feel this way, so we should have resources that express that. And I want the Black girls to mosh at my shows and everyone to mosh at my shows.”
Incidentally, this seems to be a theme reflected in the recent release of another New Jersey singer primarily known for R&B, SZA (who hails from Maplewood, a 90-minute train ride away). On SZA’s new album, SOS, she forays into punk on “F2F”; the surprising shift garnered a positive response on Twitter. Meanwhile, both SZA and Fousheé’s intricate songwriting has been compared to battle rap — a connection that Fousheé can trace to their shared home state and its proximity to the New York battle rap scene.
“Plainfield, that’s where they listen to a lot of D-Block and underground rappers and there’s their own set of rap heroes there,” she reminisces. “There are so many independent rappers coming out of Plainfield.” She describes Somerville as her “middle point in creativity and experimentation,” again citing Bob Dylan influences that set her apart from a typical rap head or R&B singer. “That’s where I was introduced to Bob Marley, and Celine Dion, and dancing while singing, and this idea of artistry. So, that, and then maybe even a little Bob Dylan from Bridgewater and Z100, the more rock and folky influence.”
The thing she wants listeners to take away from this melange of influences and sounds is “that vulnerability and rage can coexist,” she says, opening up more space not just for Black voices in hardcore scenes, but also for freer expression of these emotions in Black music. It doesn’t all have to be just one thing; nor should anyone feel alienated because they don’t fall neatly into a prescribed box, category, or genre based solely on their ethnic or cultural background. “I don’t want to do what anyone expects,” she declares. “I like to keep people guessing.” But for anyone who expected a less challenging experience, she recommends giving softCORE a chance to grow on them. “Please listen to it at least three times. By the third time, you probably might have a different favorite song, or you might hear something different. Listen to it three times.”