Red Key Records introduces Yeli Rain with pop/hip-hop single “Match Energy”

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With “Match Energy,” a poppy hip-hop/R&B number, Red Key Records added a new song and a new artist to its ranks, Yeli Rain.

“It has an urban R&B feel with a hint of a country sound,” said Fred Crawford, a co-composer with Jonathon Radow.

The lyrics, in Yeli’s soft, strong, expressive voice, tells the story of a woman whose significant other has been multiply unfaithful, and she isn’t going to take it anymore.

Part of the fun is the mix of music, vocals and theme. The melody is definitely pop with, as Fred says, a hint of country, the beat is hip-hop, and the theme is R&B — a determined woman singing about not taking no crap, no how from nobody.

“This is the approach where the woman, instead of breaking up, gets revenge. She’s literally matching what he’s doing,” said Fred.

Now hold on tight for the ride of your life
You gon’ cheat then I’ma cheat twice

“But at the same time, it’s a toxic modern relationship. They love each other, but they’re also still being unfaithful. It’s the good-girl-gone-bad story. She wants to be faithful, she wants to be in love, but he’s cheating, so she’s gonna do it too.”

She is new to recording, but not to the entertainment industry. Under her own name, Nia Riley, she has more than a million followers on Instagram alone and on other social media for her work in television reality shows, movies and podcasts.

Among her television credits are “Love & Hip Hop: Hollywood”; “Marriage Boot Camp: Reality Stars”: and “Red Table Talk.” She has been a model and appeared on many magazine covers.

She is the daughter of Grammy Award winning producer and songwriter Teddy Riley, who has worked for such luminaries as Michael Jackson, Bobby Brown and others.

“Match Energy” was produced by the two Saints, Saint Blaise (Fred Blaise Crawford), and Saint Jon (Jonathon Radow), who have also been introduced as co-songwriters for “Match Energy.”

Fred is a co-founder, with Danny Bonilla, of Chicago’s Red Key Records. He is also the president and CEO of the label, and he is an award-winning producer in his own right. He has worked with such artists as Day 26, Gucci Mane, Snoh Aalegra, Chaka Khan, Bobby Brown “and countless others.”

For 10 years earlier in his career, he was signed as a producer with Diddy’s Bad Boy Records.

Red Key, which owns a studio in Chicago, has a distribution deal with Sony.

Yeli and Red Key are working on her first album, which will be out sometime in 2025.

“She’s in the studio with us, working on her first full album as we speak,” Fred said. “We have some major features who will be on the album, and she is also going to be launching a podcast soon,” he said.

With her first single out, Red Key Records is introducing a new song and a new artist. Meet them both by connecting with Yeli Rain and Red Key Records on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

“Match Energy”: Apple Music | Spotify   

Website, Red Key Records

Yeli Rain: Spotify  | Facebook | Instagram | X

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Jay Anthony figured out how to cope with personal loss and the fears of the pandemic through the songs in his first EP “Music & Me”

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When dealing with feelings of loss, anxiety, depression, fear, or even isolation, people often rely on personal interests and activities to help pull themselves through.

For vocalist Jay Anthony, he relied on his music to pull himself through the loss of his grandmother as well as the fear and uncertainty of the pandemic.

Anthony, an R&B, pop and gospel singer, recently released his first EP as an independent solo artist called “Music & Me.” He said he gave it that title because it best describes the impact that music had during those days and weeks of the pandemic when he was stuck at home.

“I really used that time to listen to some of the greats, like Tony Bennett and Frank Sinatra – and I listened to Michael Jackson, who was one of my biggest inspirations,” said Anthony. “I was also able to keep writing songs and journaling during those uncertain times.”

And then later in 2020, tragedy struck within his close personal circle when his grandmother passed away. He said the loss was devastating for him – and he went into a state of depression.

 “I had lost interest in music, which is crazy because it truly is my passion,” he said. “I didn't want to sing, and I didn't want to write. But I still was able to do my journaling at the time.”

One of the six tracks on the EP is called “A Better Place.” According to Anthony, the song was inspired by his journal writings, where he was able to express how he was feeling about his grandmother’s passing and then turn them into meaningful lyrics.

When he was singing what became the sixth and final track on the EP, titled “Worth Living,” he said he thought about the period when he was feeling depressed – and he was also thinking about everybody else that was fighting depression at that same time.

“After it was recorded and the producer played it back to me, I cried like a baby,” said Anthony. “It was at that point I thought, ‘Wow! If this inspired me, then I want to know what it would do for other people as well.’

Anthony began singing as a young boy in church, where he later gave his first solo performance at age 12, even though he was known to be really shy and quiet. His uncle was the church’s choir director and his aunt was the choir soloist.

“My aunt had such a beautiful voice that she actually would make me cry whenever she would sing,” he said. “But then she would pass me the mic. And in a church like ours, even as a child, when someone passes you the mic, you'd better be ready and able to sing, and sing on key for sure. That’s your opportunity. I thank God that she was preparing me for what I am able to do today.”

He then went on to join the school choir and participate in talent shows. He said it was his music teacher who exposed him to lots of different music. He fell in love with Tony Bennett, who once described himself as “a tenor who sings like a baritone,” along with Luther Vandross, himself a baritone.

These artists had personal meaning to Anthony as he became a teenager.

“You know, during that ‘growing up period,’ my voice changed from soprano to baritone,” he said. “So I was able to listen to those guys - and they gave me confidence in my voice. I knew then that it was okay to have a baritone voice - and they really helped me through that transition as a singer. That's why I do some of the things I do now; I borrowed from them.”

Right after high school, Anthony was able to do some modeling. But the highlight occurred when he appeared as an extra in the Will Smith movie, “After Earth,” where he got to meet the actor. Later, he had the chance to appear in Smith’s movie, “Concussion,” but he turned it down.

“I am grateful to have been given those opportunities,” he said, “but they weren’t music. Music is my passion.”

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