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Say Yes, Say More: Floetry in Full Bloom
Floetry rose from London spoken-word circles to the Philadelphia neo-soul scene, pairing Marsha Ambrosius's soaring melodies with Natalie Stewart's grounded poetry.
London cafes, Philly studios
After years of working apart, this outing carries a reunion energy and brings Raheem DeVaughn to color the corners with velvety harmony. Expect a patient arc with Say Yes, Floetic, Getting Late, and Supastar stretching into long vamps where the band lets space breathe. The room often feels mixed and relaxed, with day-one fans, younger crate-diggers, and couples sharing quiet nods during slow jams.Small nuggets that change how you listen
Lesser-known note: early cuts formed with Dre and Vidal at A Touch of Jazz and string arranger Larry Gold, and the duo also wrote Butterflies for Michael Jackson. Live, Natalie Stewart tends to seed short poems that frame Marsha Ambrosius's runs, echoing their first U.S. club tours. Please note that song choices and staging mentioned here are informed predictions and could shift once the lights go up.The Neo-Soul Living Room: Floetry's People, Styles, and Rituals
A Floetry show feels like a living room with a big PA, where people dress for comfort and expression at once.
Style notes and quiet signals
You will see wide-brim hats, soft knits, crisp sneakers, and prints with earth tones that nod to early-2000s roots. Between songs, pockets of the room trade favorite lines from Floetic, and a few bring small notebooks for the poetry breaks. When Say Yes starts, couples sway while friends hum the hook and cue the ooohs on the downbeat.Rituals beyond the stage
Merch trends lean toward lyric tees and simple fonts, with designs that favor the words over big graphics. Meetups happen near the bar where longtime fans swap stories of club dates and Raheem DeVaughn cameos. It is a respectful crowd that listens hard, cheers at the right moments, and lets the silence around a poem do its work.Inside the Honey: Floetry's Sound, Stretched Onstage
Floetry lives on contrast, with Marsha Ambrosius bending notes slowly while Natalie Stewart locks the cadence like a heartbeat.
Space, pocket, and patient build
The live band usually centers drums, bass, keys, and a clean guitar, keeping tempos unhurried so the lyrics land. Songs often sit in a gentle sway, and the group might drop the key a half step live to keep tone warm and singable deep into the night. On pieces like Say Yes, the 6/8 feel widens as the chorus returns, letting Marsha Ambrosius stretch ad-libs while the bassist holds a simple stair-step line. Natalie Stewart will sometimes reframe a verse with a new spoken tag, turning a familiar tune into a short story with a snap ending.Subtle lights, song-first choices
Visuals tend to glow in amber and purple, but cues stay soft so the ear tracks phrasing, not flash. A small insider touch to notice is how the keyboardist favors Rhodes and Wurly textures over bright piano, which gives the poems a velvet bed to sit on.Kindred Grooves: Floetry Fans, Meet Your Live Neighbors
If you love how Floetry balances hush and heat, Jill Scott offers a similar live warmth with conversational riffs and a band-first approach.