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Say Yes to Floetry
Floetry are a London duo mixing spoken word and mellow R&B, led by Marsha Ambrosius and Natalie Stewart.\n
Poetry Born in London, Forged in Neo-Soul\nAfter years apart and stop-start reunions, their return centers on rebuilding that singer-poet balance people first heard on Floetic. Expect a slow-burning set with Say Yes, Floetic, and Getting Late, with SupaStar as a mid-set lift.\n
Likely Moments and Who You'll See\nThe crowd skews multi-generational and genre-savvy, from spoken word circles to deep-cut R&B fans, with couples swaying and friends comparing favorite verses. You will notice earth-tone fits, headwraps, retro trainers, and quiet singalongs that save the loud release for the hooks. Trivia time: Marsha Ambrosius wrote the melody for Butterflies, later recorded by Michael Jackson, and early studio work grew at the A Touch of Jazz collective in Philadelphia. For transparency, these song choices and production ideas reflect informed expectations and could differ from what happens the night you attend.
The Floetry Scene, From Aisle To Afterglow
The room fills early with people comparing favorite lines, and you hear gentle hums of choruses before the lights drop.\n
Style, Rituals, and Little Joys\nStyle leans effortless: headwraps and clean fades, earth-tone jackets, vintage trainers, and a few 2000s velour sets making a comeback. When Floetic or Say Yes starts, a low chorus builds from the floor, then the crowd locks into a soft call-and-response on the hooks.\n
Merch With A Purpose\nBetween songs, some fans trade short poems in the aisles, a nod to how this music grew from open mics. Merch tables move vinyl, hoodies with the Floetic script, and simple notebooks for writing, which suits the night more than flashy items. The culture feels caring but not hushed, like a living room that just happens to have great monitors and a pocket you can trust.
How Floetry Builds A Room With Sound
Live, Marsha Ambrosius carries the melody with a silky top end and sharp runs, while Natalie Stewart locks the cadence like a percussionist with words.\n
Words As Drums, Voice As Velvet\nThe band favors Rhodes, electric bass, pared-down guitar, and dry snare, which keeps space for the poem and the hook to breathe. Arrangements often start sparse, then swell on the chorus, and they like to flip to half-time for a bridge before snapping back.\n
Small Moves, Big Impact\nA subtle trick they use is dropping the key or trimming the high harmonies by a step on slower numbers so the lead can float softer without strain. On Say Yes, they may tag an extra vamp where Natalie Stewart riffs new lines while the keyboard holds a tremolo pad, and Marsha Ambrosius echoes phrases like a call-and-response. Lighting tends to track mood changes in warm hues and slow fades, supporting the music instead of chasing it. Keep in mind, arrangement and production notes here are reasoned predictions and might not match the exact choices onstage.
If You Like Floetry, You'll Feel This Too
Fans of Floetry often also ride for Jill Scott, because both blend spoken cadence with warm live band soul rooted in Philly.\n