Jimetta Rose & The Voices of Creation Share Title Track to Forthcoming LP

Photo by Ethan DeLorenzo
June 25 2024

Things Are Getting Better TRACKLIST
Portals
To Each A Zone
Surrender the Day
Miracle (Interlude)
Everyday Blessings
Things Are Getting Better
Already Real To Me
VoC Chant (Interlude)
Everywhere I Look (Love is Everywhere)

Things Are Getting Better” is out now, buy/stream it here.

Things Are Getting Better is out July 26, preorder it here.

Today, Jimetta Rose and The Voices of Creation share the title track from their forthcoming album Things Are Getting Better (out on July 26 via Day Dreamer, the fresh imprint from Night Dreamer). A spirit-lifting, soul-stirring devotional that effortlessly unites house, funk, soul, RnB and hip-hop influences, Things Are Getting Better hears the LA-based vocal group reach new heights to spread a message of faith and togetherness in troubled times. Preorder the Things Are Getting Better LP and listen to today’s new single “Things Are Getting Better” here.

The album’s title track is a captivating, confident funk groove that commands the kind of connection one might feel in a place of worship. “Things Are Getting Better” puts the choir’s power and credence in the center, felt double fold as they repeat the title like a mantra that must be true – and for Jimetta Rose & The Voices of Creation, it simply is.

Of today’s single, Jimetta says: “’Things Are Getting Better‘ is a reminder, a prayer, and a command. ‘You gotta tell it what you need it to be, gotta tell it what you need to see’, the song says, and that’s just what we must do. It’s like a pep talk to the self with a melody. Shout outs to Ryan Papa Porter and Danny Janklow for the amazing brass work on this tune.”

Things Are Getting Better is that invocation to believe. Where their Mario Caldato-produced debut How Good It Is captured the raw power of the choir and channelled their irrepressible live energy on record, Things Are Getting Better introduces a more crafted studio sound to the arrangements. An evolution rather than a reinvention, this is the gospel of Jimetta, delivering “new mantras and new prayers for this new day that we find ourselves in that is so stark between the dark and the light.”

If there is a gospel that LA-based singer, composer, arranger and choir leader Jimetta Rose lives by it is that “our voices are our tools to heal ourselves and others.” Composed of non-professional singers who she assembled following an online call-out, The Voices of Creation embodies Jimetta’s mission to demystify the ministry, spreading a message of faith in the power of music to effect positive change. As she says, “If we sing songs together that uplift and highlight our interdependence on one another, I think we are headed towards a different paradigm and a different way of being.”

A prolific vocalist and collaborator with the likes of Anderson. Paak, Carlos Niño and Angel Bat Dawid, this time Jimetta leads from the front, bringing in instrumentalists Isaiah Collier, Ryan Porter and V.C.R. to create a fuller, more diverse palette. Recorded at Sunset Sound studios in Los Angeles with musical director and keyboardist Jack Maeby, producer, percussionist and vocalist Allakoi Peete, and mixed by Ben Baptie (whose credits include Sault, Little Simz and Cleo Sol), the resulting album encapsulates Jimetta’s vision for a “Black spiritual classical music.”

Knitting together influences from across eras, “To Each is Zone” nods to Faith, Hope And Charity’s 1975 single “To Each His Own,” flipping the meaning of the song into a new context, and reinforcing the humility needed in times of division. Showcasing Jimetta’s vocal harmonies, “Miracles” embodies the idea that the voice can inspire faith where none seems forthcoming. Like “Real To Me,” it feels like a lost classic from the great American songbook, imbuing the grace of the vocal performance with a timeless quality.

And if gospel house brought the choir to the club, then “Everyday Blessings” brings the kick drum to the church – a belter for transcendence, not preached from up high, but delivered from the congregation. The album closes with the urgent, shuffling breakbeat of “Everywhere I Look,” bringing together elements of Black music history from turntablism to Pharoah Sanders’ “Love is Everywhere” in the complete expression of Jimetta’s ministry. Like a “Stand on the Word” for the 21st century, “Everywhere I Look” will resonate far and wide.

“We’re here now and who knows where we’re going,” Jimetta says. Music, faith, community. The Voices of Creation are living their purpose and things are only going to get better.

Read album liner notes by Jimetta Rose here.
Read Jimetta Rose & The Voices of Creation Bio here.