R&B/Hip-Hop Fresh Picks of the Week: Melanie Fiona, DC The Don, Mereba, Ms Banks & More

Listen to new must-hear songs from emerging R&B/hip-hop artists like Leo Waters and Jordyn Simone.

R&B/Hip-Hop Fresh Picks of the Week: Melanie Fiona, DC The Don, Mereba, Ms Banks & More

With just over a week to go until the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election and the announcement of the 2025 Grammy nominations, Q4 is living up to its reputation as the most hectic time of the year. To ease us into what’s sure to be a tumultuous next few weeks, stars across hip-hop and R&B have stepped up to keep us entertained and engaged.

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Last week, music icon Beyoncé delivered a powerful speech in support of Vice President Kamala Harris‘ bid for the presidency, alongside Kelly Rowland, Tina Knowles, Willie Nelson and Willie Jones. The Oct. 25 rally in Houston activated both the Beyhive and the K-Hive, with around 30,000 people in attendance, according to the Harris campaign.

Megan Thee Stallion, another H-Town superstar, used last weekend to launch Act II of her Megan LP, which topped R&B/Hip-Hop Albums back in June. Her new release features the breakout hit “Bigger In Texas,” whose hometown-hailing music video features HTX legends like Scarface, Paul Wall and Slim Thug. Opting for an non-traditional Monday release (Oct. 28), Tyler, the Creator dropped off Chromakopia, his seventh studio album, which features appearance from Daniel Caesar, Childish Gambino, GloRilla, Lil Wayne, Teezo Touchdown, ScHoolboy Q, and Sexyy Red.

In more somber news, hip-hop legend DJ Clark Kent — a Brooklyn giant who worked closely with hip-hop heavyweights like Jay-Z and The Notorious B.I.G.passed away last Friday (Oct. 25) after a three-year battle with colon cancer.

With Fresh Picks, Billboard aims to highlight some of the best and most interesting new sounds across R&B and hip-hop — from Jordyn Simone and Joseph Solomon’s new wedding anthem to Ms Banks’s fiery comeback track. Be sure to check out this week’s Fresh Picks in our Spotify playlist below.

Freshest Find: Melanie Fiona, “Say Yes”

For the first taste of her forthcoming EP (due next year), Grammy-winner Melanie Fiona is preaching the gospel of saying “yes.” With Thundercat on bass, SiR on backing vocals and longtime collaborator Andre Harris overseeing production, “Say Yes” finds Fiona crooning, “I lay my cards, out on the table / Showing hearts like never before / Tell me will you be ready willing and able / When I come knocking at your door.” As a veteran soul singer, Fiona expertly finds the pockets of groove in the track’s live instrumentation. Inspired by her mental health journey over the past decade and the freedom she internalized after the birth of her son in 2016, “Say Yes” is a gorgeous ode to the perseverance of the human spirit — and the beauty that comes with keeping yourself open when you most want to shut out the world.

Ms Banks, “Boss B—h”

After a two-year break, Nigerian-British MC Ms Banks is back with a fiery new single titled “Boss B—h.” “They tryna rub me out, but I don’t see a b—h fit/ Running up ya lips, but in school you was a prick/ Looking for some shit on me that could get me eclipsed/ But like an Air Force with no tick, it don’t exist,” she spits over a bass-heavy A Class beat that takes a few sonic cues from Detroit rap. Fresh off serving as the opener for the European leg of Megan Thee Stallion’s Hot Girl Summer tour, Ms Banks is poised for a stellar run in 2025 — and “Boss B—h” is a very promising preview.

Dc the Don & Ambré, “Knock Me Off My Feet”

Milwaukee rapper DC the Don’s latest album is finally here, and this Ambré duet is one of the best tracks. Rebirth continues his melding of hip-hop, rock and trap, with “Knock Me Off My Feet” offering an Afrobeats-inflected, romance-minded feel to his musical mosaic. “You was runnin’ ’round the city off no sleep when you met me/ Knock me off my feet when you met me/ That put me on defense/ Back against the curb, now I’m OD, OD,” he croons in the refrain, flaunting an unexpected affinity for slick pop melodies. Ambré’s ethereal tone provides a smart complement to DC’s more grounded delivery that’s filled out by a slightly raspy edge. This link-up arrived in just in time for cuffing season.

Mereba, “Counterfeit”

Buzzy R&B star Mereba has a new project due next year called The Breeze Grew a Fire, and “Counterfeit” is her first offering. Over twinkling, barely-there synths and neo-soul percussion, Mereba’s airy tone soars: “You’re the original/ You never do what they do/ You’re the original/ Don’t let ’em counterfeit you,” she sings in the chorus. For its cinematic outro, the song loses its beat and opts for acoustic guitars wrapped in a swelling string arrangement. “We’re all high, whole function flying/ Look up high, wild sky,” she repeatedly coos, each recitation broadening the expanse that the “original” can claim dominion over.

Jordyn Simone & Joseph Solomon, “I Do”

There’s been some talk about a lack of traditional love songs in modern R&B, but Jordyn Simone and Jospeh Solomon have something to say. A formidable contender for the best wedding anthem released in 2024, “I Do” finds the two vocalists redefining chemistry. “I never thought a love like this would find me/ All on my own, oh, I was just fine when/ You pulled me close, and then I couldn’t fight it/ Deep inside, I knew I couldn’t let go,” they harmonize in the pre-chorus, with Jordyn’s lovestruck timbre blending beautifully with both Joseph’s gentle falsetto and the production’s soulful strings. Love songs about the little things — with a little modulation, to boot! — will never go out of style.

Leo Waters & Kaash Paige, “Smoke + Mirrors (Remix)”

Ever the dependable R&B collaborator, Kaash Paige brings new life to Leo Waters’ “Smoke + Mirrors” with her sultry new remix. Waters dropped the original version of the song last Decemeber, and its plucky piano-inflected groove proved the perfect soundscape for Paige. “Baby, pull up on me/ I’m just tryna feel ya, hear ya/ I’ve been loving you better/ Touching you better than he ever could, ever would/ Now I see smoke and mirrors,” she haughtily promises, blurring the dual metaphors of steamy post-sex mirrors and the lightweight “smoke and mirrors” excuses we lean on to avoid giving into the things we want and fear the most.