REVIEW: Vybz Kartel – Heart & Soul

Which brings us to the nom­i­na­tion of Vybz Kartel’s ”Heart & Soul” – a deci­sion that is, para­dox­i­cal­ly, spec­tac­u­lar­ly note­wor­thy in the case of a 50‑year‑old gangs­ta dee­jay who has spent the sup­posed prime of his career behind bars. Kar­tel has earned this sec­ond con­sec­u­tive Gram­my nod in the most lit­er­al sense. It’s the result of 35 years of relent­less work, increas­ing­ly also in ser­vice of the cul­ture.

That said: ”Heart & Soul” most­ly proves that hav­ing a con­cept doesn’t auto­mat­i­cal­ly make an album, cer­tain­ly not a good one. Across eleven tracks, Kar­tel explores var­i­ous shades of love, but many of them sound just as gener­ic as the title. Maybe the album came from the heart indeed. I per­son­al­ly still don’t hear much soul in it.

Take the open­er ”They’re Out­ta Love We Aren’t” (for Sidem, with Sidem in the video) and the clos­er ”Only Gets Bet­ter” (also for Sidem, but with some­one else in the video). They book­end the album with a roman­tic frame – cute in the­o­ry, but in prac­tice it’s Island Pop by the rule­book, with the rule­book writ­ten about ten years ago. ”Bad Bad Bad” with Ishaw­na, mean­while, walks the tightrope between old‑school homage and the kind of conga‑line your par­ents might’ve done in the base­ment with notable unc‑energy.

And yet Kar­tel is, of course, still Kar­tel – always one moment of bril­liance away. Hooks that he clear­ly freestyled on the spot with producer/engineer Red­boom Supamix (”11:45”, ”Ghet­to Girl Cho­sen”) are the kind of lines oth­er artists can’t con­jure after six weeks in a writ­ers’ camp with eight co‑writers. His abil­i­ty to fuse seduc­tive melodies with a hard­core edge, bridg­ing the proud his­to­ry of his genre with the demands of mod­ern con­sump­tion, remains unmatched. ”I Know,” for exam­ple, had seri­ous Tik­Tok trac­tion last fall and is still a high­light in 2026. The title track, too, is pure Kar­tel canon: noth­ing you haven’t heard before, but exe­cut­ed flaw­less­ly.

Also strik­ing: ”You Walked Away,” in which Kar­tel reflects on his bro­ken rela­tion­ship with Tane­sha John­son – essen­tial­ly a reprise of his last major love album, ”To Tane­sha” (2019). Instead of air­ing dirty laun­dry or stag­ing grand con­fes­sions, Kar­tel lets the thoughts spill out in real time, exact­ly as they tend to in moments like these. You messed up, I messed up, now we’re in this mess. What a mess.


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