
Electric Love
West Point, Georgia-bred singer, pianist, and soul revivalist announces his debut album, 'Electric Love'. Brother Wallace doesn't just sing about joy - he fights for it. The music moves like a shot of sunlight through a storm cloud: Stax-and-satin soul, piano-driven, and bursting with momentum, it's built for the exact moment when you decide you're not going to let the world harden you. Across its 13 songs, 'Electric Love' is less a debut than a revelation - a body of work fuelled by gospel roots and classic soul lineage (Sam Cooke, Little Richard, Southern soul greats) while refusing to live in nostalgia. Wallace writes in lived-in scenes and hard-earned feeling: heartbreak without defeat, joy without naïveté, vulnerability without apology.
West Point, Georgia-bred singer, pianist, and soul revivalist announces his debut album, 'Electric Love'. Brother Wallace doesn't just sing about joy - he fights for it. The music moves like a shot of sunlight through a storm cloud: Stax-and-satin soul, piano-driven, and bursting with momentum, it's built for the exact moment when you decide you're not going to let the world harden you. Across its 13 songs, 'Electric Love' is less a debut than a revelation - a body of work fuelled by gospel roots and classic soul lineage (Sam Cooke, Little Richard, Southern soul greats) while refusing to live in nostalgia. Wallace writes in lived-in scenes and hard-earned feeling: heartbreak without defeat, joy without naïveté, vulnerability without apology.
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$16.45Description
West Point, Georgia-bred singer, pianist, and soul revivalist announces his debut album, 'Electric Love'. Brother Wallace doesn't just sing about joy - he fights for it. The music moves like a shot of sunlight through a storm cloud: Stax-and-satin soul, piano-driven, and bursting with momentum, it's built for the exact moment when you decide you're not going to let the world harden you. Across its 13 songs, 'Electric Love' is less a debut than a revelation - a body of work fuelled by gospel roots and classic soul lineage (Sam Cooke, Little Richard, Southern soul greats) while refusing to live in nostalgia. Wallace writes in lived-in scenes and hard-earned feeling: heartbreak without defeat, joy without naïveté, vulnerability without apology.




















