Skip to content
PressRewind.fm
PressRewind.fm

Come through…dig the sound

  • Home
  • Reviews
    • Singles
    • Albums
    • Videos
    • Rundowns
  • Features
    • No Hooks
    • Liner Notes
    • CTRL+ALT+REPEAT
  • News
    • Signal Boost
    • Press Play
PressRewind.fm

Come through…dig the sound

Jen Ash

Jen Ash – Hell: Single & Video Review

Staff, January 29, 2026January 29, 2026

A upbeat revolt where voice leads, judgment fades, and the room finally exhales.

The first thing Jen Ash does on “Hell” is set the temperature and keep it dancing. Her vocal steps in close and steady, sun-warm and assured, with a firmness that feels sincere rather than staged. The groove lifts and rolls beneath her—upright bass popping with purpose, piano hits crisp and buoyant—giving the syllables air to move while the rhythm keeps nudging forward. It’s controlled, yes, but it smiles as it moves. A bright sway that drives forward and keeps its feet light.

The track glides with a light, simmering pace that still keeps the hips involved. Jen sings against judgment with a level voice and a playful spark, choosing clarity and groove over grand drama. And that choice feels personal and free. She leans into defiance with poise and ease, hips loose, shoulders relaxed. “They tell me to go to hell / I kind of like it,” she sings, and the line lands easy—a boundary traced and held. The chorus opens the room wider, backing voices fanning out like warm air, while her lead stays centered, giving the hook extra pull without dimming the song’s glow.

The video matches that control with motion and color. We begin in a church space shaped by stillness and order, then watch Ash tilt it loose with hips-first swagger, bright wears, and the ease of a proud sinner in the shoulders. The camera relaxes as the settings change—subway, then an underground club—until bodies replace pews and the rules start to feel optional. Green fur and leather flashing against cassocks and habits, movement answering silence, And when those uniforms finally sway, the message locks in for good – way past the point of taking anything back.

By the end, “Hell” feels like clarity you can dance through. The song keeps its pulse bright and carries its point with grace. Ash steps out of the box, keeps her voice level, and rides the warmth all the way through. She carries freedom in motion, and the room finally decides to move with her.

Credits
Producer(s): Salomon “Elyon” Kouassi • Label(s): The MPT Label • Release: 01/2026 • Album: —

Connect with Jen Ash: Instagram | Threads | Spotify | TikTok | YouTube

Related posts:

Lyric Jones Launches Hidden Laces, a New YouTube Interview Series for DJs and Crew Culture

iyla — “Pledge” review: boundaries with bite

Kris Kelli links with Rick Ross & Gunplay on “99 Bottles”

Single Reviews Videos Alt R&BElyonJen AshPop SoulSalomon KouassiThe MPT Label

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Recent Posts

  • Voision Xi – Muse (for Joyce) [Amber Navran Remix]: Single Review
  • Akeem Ali – Latex: Single & Video Review
  • Pavy – NY Girls (feat. Swim Team): Single Review
  • Desmond Parson – Major In Love (feat. Laia): Single Review
  • Debo Ray – Going Down: Single Review

Archives

  • February 2026
  • January 2026
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • August 2022
  • July 2022

Follow PressRewind.fm

  • Instagram
  • Spotify
  • Threads

Advertisement

  • Share using Native toolsShareCopied to clipboard
  • Share on X (Opens in new window)X
  • Share on Threads (Opens in new window)Threads
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Facebook
  • Share on Bluesky (Opens in new window)Bluesky

Newsletter

Etiam placerat velit vitae dui blandit sollicitudin. Vestibulum tincidunt sed dolor sit amet volutpat. Nullam egestas sem at mollis sodales

©2026 PressRewind.fm | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes