There are moments where she is afraid to fall (“Afraid to Fall”), and other times when she recognizes she has fallen (“What Can I Say”). Falling is a motif that runs deeply through We Need to Talk and luckily for us we witness her in flight at every stage. ![]() The singer bobs and weaves through different sounds, some songs pulling from her pop predecessors like Destiny’s Child (“Rebound”) and Backstreet Boys (“Disconnected”) while ballads like “Easy” show that her voice is limitless. The album steadies itself through a series of conversations-many of which are one-sided-strewn across phone calls and voicemails, a nostalgic choice against Parx’s futuristic pop production. Tayla Parx’s We Need to Talk borrows from the philosophy of Erykah Badu’s Mama’s Gun: Parx is an analog girl in a digital world.
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