Adanna Duru floats into her own world on “toes in the grass,” moving like a woman who doesn't suffer fools gladly. There’s a soft hush at the start— warm acoustic strings plucking in rhythm – before a growly little synth creeps in. Thick and squelchy, it’s the kind of counter melody that balances out the baroque energy of the arrangement with a snarky smirk. That mix of Victorian-fancy and murky electronics makes you perk up your ears a bit as you start to sense the mischief that Adanna has bubbling in the margins.
Then our hostess starts to sing and talk slick all at once. Adanna’s tone stays velveted even as she cuts deep—switching up registers line by line like she’s dressing moods instead of melodies. Her voice never really stays in one box for long. One second it’s low and toasted, next it’s rising near falsetto with this warm bravado that says, “you mad? then stay mad.” It’s pretty, but not timid.
Her delivery plays tag with the rhythm as she sings lines like “I’m too preoccupied making that dough-oh-oh/ I’m not trippin’ ‘bout bitches I don’t know-oh-oh.” Her yoga interlude alone deserves a plaque: “Bitches think I spend time thinking about them… I’m just at yoga, hitting my downward dog.” That right there is some top shelf jab throwing.
Producers Mosaic and Noah Barer don’t overplay their hand. They keep the production river-walk calm, allowing their star to steal the show with a heavy serving of sugar-coated swagger. All said, "toes in the grass" is an excellent cut that's cool without trying and sharp without posturing.
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