Meet No Guidnce, the London Group Resurrecting the '90s R&B Boyband Era
Stealing hearts with angelic harmonies and making waves across oceans, Londonâs newest prodigal boyband No Guidnce is delivering us back to the golden age of R&B. With cosigns from artists like Boyz II Men, and legendary acts like Babyface showing up to their show in Los Angeles, itâs clear theyâre getting passed the baton with resounding approval.
Consisting of Zeekay, Josh, Ebubé, and Kaci, No Guidnce is a soulful quartet making a name for themselves in an industry actively debating whether or not R&B is dead. With a sound reminiscent of the timeless tracks youâd hear while buckled in the backseat or as your hair is being washed in the sink, itâs impossible not to be transported to a time in which R&B was at its highest reign. Catching the attention of artists like Anderson .Paak, Labrinth, and more, No Guidnce has mastered a sound that begs you to be a kid again, or ravenously in love, or somewhere in between.
Their latest release, the Is It A Crime? EP, consists of four tracks that bow to every cornerstone of romanceâthe yearning, the mourning, the floating, and the falling. With emotionally dense singles like âCommittedâ and their title-track hit âIs It A Crime?,â their most significant offering to the industry is bringing us back to the roots of a perfectly crafted love song. To Zeekay, a perfect love song âtakes a good story. An experience. I like songs written with a lot of metaphors and wordplay.â
Paying homage to a lost art, boybands were a once vital organ to the industry that has been buried under the sands of ego and individualism. âR&B is more than just music. A proper R&B boyband doesnât come around too often,â shares Kaci. âI think in the '90s it was poppinâ because everyone was trying to make it, but itâs not really as much of a thing anymore.â
Taking it upon themselves to resurrect a genre both malnourished and overshadowed, theyâre only paying respects to the musical eloquence of their very childhoods. âHaving grown up in it and having listened to it is why weâre helping bring it back,â shares Josh. Zeekay adds, âMusic changed dramatically from 2009 to 2020. There was a change with the deaths of old school stars like Michael Jackson and Whitney Houston. I think love has changed, too. How people identify with love, how we define it. I think the young artists whose parents put them on and are grown up now, like Coco Jones and Alex Vaughn, and even people who have been here a long time and didnât get big until recently like Lucky Daye, are becoming mainstream again and a boyband is whatâs missing.â
It only takes a few tracks to be immediately aware of their comfort in their sensitivity and their radical ability to strip to the core of themselves. Each member has individually grown up with open-hearted women figures in their lives, nurturing their vulnerability and giving them permission to lean in. âMy family has always been very open. Weâve always had open conversations at home. Iâve always been an emotionally available person,â shares Kaci. Ebubé adds, âIâve always been close with my mom and grew up with my sister, auntie, and her daughters. I was always in conversation with women and understood how they view life. Itâs important that we understand how they view life.â These emotionally nutritious ecosystems could only birth R&B stars, or at the very least men willing and able to be fully seen, and arenât we lucky to witness it all?
As No Guidnce continues to leave audiences breathless and in awe as they harmonize like itâs a magic trick, we take solace in knowing we were there from the very inception of the British boyband, bowing to a timeworn art while bringing it lightyears forward.