Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol. 1 Vinyl Listening Experience (Event Recap)
Jill Scott’s debut turned 25 years old today, and we celebrated with the second installment of our Music Nerds vinyl listening experience.
For 80 minutes, the room swayed with head nods and two-steps, quiet mm-hmms, a little karaoke, and the kind of deep sighs that come when you feel seen as Who Is Jill Scott? Words and Sounds Vol. 1 spun front to back at the Association for Creative Enlightenment.
As each track rolled in, so did the reflections. We talked about how Jill didn’t just sing, she spoke. About the way she fused poetry and melody. How her jazz-like phrasing stretched words into moments. How the go-go rhythms and live instrumentation gave her space to breathe and testify. And how “I Think It’s Better” might be one of the greatest transitions into a love song ever. (Okay, that one might just be me.)
25 Years of Who Is Jill Scott? Vol. 1 and It Still Moves Us
It’s been 25 years since Jill Scott asked us a question that still lingers in the air like incense, Who is Jill Scott? And somehow, even after all this time, the album still feels like both an introduction and an invitation into Jill’s sonic journal pages lined with love, longing, and liberation.
The Internet’s ‘Ego Death’ Turns 10: A Quiet Classic That Changed Everything
It’s been ten years since The Internet’s Ego Death dropped, a timeless, Grammy-nominated album that hinted at transformation. And transform it did. For the group, for the sound of alternative R&B, and for a generation of music lovers navigating love, identity, and the vulnerability of existing both online and in real life.
The Internet Ego Death Vinyl Listening Experience (Event Recap)
Our Ego Death 10-year anniversary celebrations started on June 13th thanks to DJ Chef Dro, the creator of Music Nerds and the curator of the vinyl listening experience, and Thanks for Listening record shop in Virginia Beach. I had the honor of co-hosting alongside her, and together we guided the conversation, shared reflections, created space for the community to connect, and the energy in the room was truly unmatched.
Hearing the album on vinyl just hit different. The instrumentation felt warmer, fuller, more alive. As the needle dropped on each side, we vibed out, fully immersed in the layers of sound that made Ego Death so special. What started as subtle head nods and quiet sways turned into full-on karaoke, with folks singing their favorite lyrics like we were at The Internet concert 10 years ago.

