Adi Oasis, Rochelle Jordan and RAYE redefine R&B with Black female narratives that expand and renew the genre.
During Black Awareness Month, the spotlight turns to three artists who push the boundaries of contemporary R&B. They break patterns, reshape aesthetics and build new narratives. Their work continues a legacy forged by Black women who have long reinvented global music.
Adi Oasis blends ancestry and futurism
French-Caribbean and based in the United States, Adi Oasis created a unique mix of R&B, funk, soul and jazz-infused textures. Her music reinforces identity, autonomy and artistic presence. Pulsing bass lines and organic arrangements define albums that merge ancestral memory with futuristic vision.
Her latest releases, including “Separate Ways” and “Cheirinho,” explore themes such as breakups, feminism and motherhood. Adi maintains a close dialogue with Brazilian culture and has collaborated with artists like Luedji Luna. By positioning Black women as architects of their own sound, she strengthens a vital space in the contemporary scene.
Rochelle Jordan expands the R&B vocabulary
Born in the UK and raised in Canada, Rochelle Jordan is one of the most innovative voices in modern R&B. Her acclaimed album “Through The Wall” blends garage, UK bass, electronic music and club aesthetics.
Rochelle contrasts intimacy and urgency to challenge the idea that female R&B must be soft or polished. Her work follows a long tradition in which Black women reshape pop music by refusing restrictive labels.
RAYE turns vulnerability into creative power
With sharp, emotional and deeply honest writing, RAYE transforms personal experiences into compositions that move between R&B, pop and contemporary gospel. Her songs explore themes such as autonomy, power abuse, sexuality and reinvention.
RAYE is living the most successful moment of her career. Her hit “WHERE IS MY HUSBAND!” — recently remixed by David Guetta and Hypaton — dominates charts worldwide, including in Brazil. Her trajectory highlights the strength of Black women who claim space in an industry that historically tried to silence them.
A future shaped by identity and experimentation
Alongside many other Black women reshaping the genre, Adi Oasis, Rochelle Jordan and RAYE show that R&B is undergoing a profound transformation. Their work points to a future grounded in experimentation, identity and creative autonomy.



