FKA twigs made her name as an R&B futurist. Her 2014 debut album, LP1, sounded otherworldly in every way â marrying her wispy, fragile vocals with wonky beats by the likes of Arca, Clams Casino, and the singer herself. The result felt precariously perfect, like if something were shifted by a millisecond, the song could come tumbling apart. Twigs expanded her repertoire on the following EP M3LL155X and album Magdalene, incorporating droning guitars, choral music, and even a Future feature. Each new dimension twigs unlocked in her work put her ahead of the curve, like challenging listeners came second nature to her.
âDonât Judge Me,â then, her first full song since releasing Magdalene in late 2019, is the most attuned to whatâs trending in the musical landscape that FKA twigs has ever sounded. She teamed up with U.K. hitmaker Fred again.., who counts Ed Sheeran and Stormzy among his regular collaborators, and rapper Headie One, a prolific member of the countryâs drill scene. Originally, it wasnât even her song in name â âDonât Judge Meâ began as âJudge Me,â an interlude on Fred again.. and Headie Oneâs 2020 collaborative mixtape Gang. On that interlude, twigs served as a moment of respite from the haziness hanging over the rest of the tape. But on the full song, she sounds at home in this alternate world her collaborators have created.
Fred again..âs propulsive beat is the chief reason for this shift. The near-constant thumping rhythm in âDonât Judge Meâ is a new addition that makes the song feel dynamic; thereâs a palpable sense of drama when it cuts out at the beginning of Headie Oneâs verse. His bars about English racism are the heart of the song: âWe can walk free, but are we really walkinâ free here?â he raps. âHow can this be home when I feel I wanna flee here?â Fredâs beat rises on cue with Headie Oneâs passion â a clear result of their work together on Gang.
On twigsâs previous hip-hop work, something was always out of place. That felt intentional on M3LL155X standout âIn Time,â which found her rapping a few bars as she waded through a dense, choppy beat, and on Magdaleneâs âholy terrain,â which thrust Future into one of her eerie, alien soundscapes. If she sounded like an afterthought on her Ty Dolla $ign collaboration âego death,â she wasnât the only one â she, Ty, and Kanye West sounded like they couldâve made three separate songs. What makes âDonât Judge Meâ special is how none of the musicians have to compromise, least of all twigs. Her voice is no less stunning here, and the song accompanies one of her most impressive videos yet, featuring a group of Black British activists and Kara Walkerâs imposing Tate Modern installation Fons Americanus.
Twigs recently finished a whole album, which sheâs said has more features than any of her previous work. âDonât Judge Meâ shows just how fruitful this new era could be. By the climax of the song, twigs sings in lockstep with Fred again..âs beat and Headie Oneâs ad-libs for 20 seconds of straight ASMR. Just like all of her best work, it feels transcendent.