Gracie Ella Takes You On A Soulful Journey With Her Single “Butterflies”
With her melodic and emotive vocal tone soaked in a soulful and gorgeous R&B musical cocktail, Canadian singer-songwriter Gracie Ella presents “Butterflies", an exhilarating single about meeting a potential true love.
Indeed, the production fuses important elements from Soul music, like the heart-melting guitar riffs, and the glamorous, polished drum pattern with a very mastered contemporary vocal performance. This production’s framework and the lyrical dexterity presented are definitely a proof that Gracie has what it takes to be recognized among big names in the music industry. Her vocal presence exudes a mellow charisma that makes listeners experience her mellifluous soul.
Signed as a songwriter to major publisher SonyATV through Twenty Seven Music, a company run by industry giant Barry Weiss and hit songwriter Jenna Andrews, the young artist is gaining the notoriety she deserves.
Stream below.
TRENDING NOW
A riptide doesn’t announce itself with a roar; it whispers, then tugs—softly at first—until you realize you’ve been drifting for miles. That’s the emotional physics powering Baby, Don’t Drown In The Wave, a 12-song album…
Neon can look like a celebration until you notice it’s flickering—still bright, still dancing, but threatening to go out between blinks. That’s the atmosphere Nique The Geek builds on “Losing You,” an upbeat contemporary R&B / pop-R&B record that smiles…
Waveendz’s “Bandz on the Side” arrives with the kind of polish that doesn’t need to announce itself. Tagged as contemporary R&B with hip-hop in its bloodstream, the single plays like a quiet victory lap…
SamTRax comes through with “Still,” a contemporary R&B cut that moves like it’s exhaling—steady, warm, and quietly stubborn. The Haitian American producer has been stacking credibility through collaborations with names such…
Psychic Fever from Exile Tribe waste no time on “Just Like Dat”—they let JP THE WAVY slide in first, rapping with that billboard-sized charisma before the chorus even has a chance to clear its throat. That sequencing matters: it turns the single into a moving…
Libby Ember’s “Let Me Go” lives in that quiet, bruise-colored space where a relationship isn’t exactly a relationship—more like a habit you keep feeding because the alternative is admitting you’ve been played in daylight. She frames the whole thing…
Hakim THE PHOENIX doesn’t sing on “Behind The Mask” like he’s trying to impress you—he sings like he’s trying to unclench you. That matters, because the song is basically a calm intervention for anyone trapped inside their own head…
A good late-night record doesn’t beg for attention—it just rearranges the room until your shoulders start moving on their own. Femi Jr and FAVE tap into that exact chemistry on “Focus,” a chilled Afrobeats cut laced with amapiano momentum…
A breakup rarely detonates; it more often erodes—daily, quietly, and with an almost administrative cruelty. Matt Burke captures that slow collapse on Blowing Up In Slow Motion, a folk-acoustic single that takes his earlier stripped version and rebuilds…
David Cloyd avoids treating momentum like a given, which is why the latest EP “Cage of Water (Remixes)” lands with purpose rather than polish-for-polish’s-sake. After the long-gap return of Red Sky Warning via…