A stripped-back acoustic reset where AZUL KECHI puts her incredible voice and solid songwriting front and center and the tracks keep their spine.
With Retrograding By Mars, AZUL KECHI strips everything back, letting her vocals completely run the board. The piano holds the main light, the timekeeping stays light-touch, and her tone stays steady even when the lines sharpen. She rides a talk-sung glide, then clicks a phrase into place when the bar needs an edge. The cover carries that same temperature, warm orange glow, star cutouts, and a calm stare that reads ready. I played this one low at first, and the closeness still came through, like the mic sat a step nearer than usual. Jeff Dynamite keeps the frame simple so her voice can fill it and you can hear the intent in the phrasing.
The album truly sparks to life when the melodies take flight, and KECHI completely commands your attention. “AZUL” puts her voice at the center, personality right on the mic, hook work that stays stuck in your palm. The self-definition hits clean in four straight lines. “I’m Azul I was that quiet one in school / Barbie on the outside but a tomboy in my shoes / I got the juice, they wanna sip it from my cup / They follow me you know they want celestial love”. “CELESTIAL LOVE” stays in that pocket, more rise in the chorus and more air in the sustain, her voice riding the piano ring until the scene feels wide and bright. “NADA MAS SOLO” closes the tier off rhythm and mouth feel, Spanish and English folding together while her cadence keeps shifting the pocket forward, fully on go.
The next couple of tracks in my rundown shift into a quieter tier — still strong, still replay‑ready, just moving with a calmer pulse. “DON’T STOP” slides by on sweetness and ease, a smooth pass where the melody stays careful and the performance holds a steady temperature. Then “NO DRAMA (Edit)” shows how much that single-ready edit matters. The shorter cut keeps the idea tight and keeps the accompaniment moving, while the longer “NO DRAMA (Full length)” score stretches the same thought past its best window. Across the set, her strongest move stays the consistency of her tone, crisp consonants up front, then the ends of words softening back into the room while the piano keeps ringing in the corners. I caught myself replaying “NADA MAS SOLO” just to hear the way she shifts her phrasing on the bar line, tiny changes that keep the groove awake.
The album’s presentation, both visual and lyrical, feels like a cohesive, intentional reset – a deliberate move to make every word and beat land with impact. The acoustic frame keeps her vocal choices front-facing, and that makes the best cuts feel even more decisive. Retrograding By Mars sits as a clean catalog marker, a tight acoustic set that keeps AZUL’s voice undeniably upfront and gives her songs some space to stretch out.
Credits
Producer(s): Jeff Dynamite • Label(s): self-released • Release: 02/2026 • Album: Retrograding By Mars
