From the moment you press play on Amends, the seminal single from Doug Burns’ debut album Left Unread, the full force of his emotive intent slips under the skin. The track pours out as a synergistically aching meditation on self repentance, the kind that settles into you before you even realise how much you have taken on. The urgency of his cadence runs parallel with the melodically accordant indie rap instrumentals. Saturated guitar notes drift through the mix with a morose slowness, each one haunting the syncopated beats as the ethereal reverb deepens the track’s sombre timbre, creating a space where reflection feels like a current that keeps pulling you back in.
Burns switches between harmonically vulnerable versing and strident bars, and that shift mirrors the volatility of the themes he unpacks. You can hear the strain of reckoning with the self, the tug of destructive urges, the pressure of hauling yourself up when your own mind tries to drag you under. There is no attempt to gloss it over. He lets the emotional weight dictate the movement of the track, and that honesty gives Amends its raw gravity.
Raised in Beaumont, California, the artist, born Keyshawn M Williams, found his voice in hip hop as a teenager when he realised it was the only place he could tell the truth without filters. After years spent balancing the uniform as a member of the US Army with the pen and the mic, he pushed himself back into the place where his sound felt real again.
Amends is now available on all major streaming platforms, including Spotify.
Review by Amelia Vandergast
