by Jada Belser
I was 14 when I first started to listen to Daniel Caesar. He was the reason I got so into music so deeply. I was just watching YouTube one day — just looking for an animation video probably — and then I saw it. “Get You” by Daniel Caesar a music video the preview started to play and I was instantly drowned in like a magnetic pull.
“Through drought and famine, natural disasters my baby has been around for me.”
That one line changed how I saw music from there on out. The presentation and the output of his voice was like nothing else I have ever heard before a divine feeling. The meaning of the song was a deep relationship, where the narrator feels a profound sense of gratitude and wonder for their partner. I can relate to the meaning on a deeper level now that I’m older.
Caesar had a humbling experience when starting his career. After a fight with his father, he was briefly homeless. He felt he had no other choice but to pursue his calling as an artist. After leaving home he started doing gigs. Caesar connected with producers and future collaborators Jordan Evans and Matthew Burnett and began writing and recording what would be his debut EP “Praise Break.” In 2014 it made chart as #19 on 20 best RnB Albums of 2014.
After some more collaborations on August 25, 2017 Caesar released his debut album Freudian that took his career to a new level. The album was shortlisted for the 2018 Polaris Music Prize. At the 60th annual Grammy Awards, Caesar won Best R&B Performance for “Get You.” At the 61st Grammy Awards Caesar won best R&B Performance for his single “Best Part.”
Caesar’s newest album Son of Spergy has gone off the charts, especially for his song “Who Knows?” “I’ll probably be a waste of your time, but who knows? Chances are I’ll step out of line, but who knows?” — a line many listeners can relate to as young people. We want a relationship to work out but you never know what could happen. Anything could go wrong. The same thing as saying, “We could break each other’s hearts,” but who knows?
“I’ve been thinking ’bout my precarious future. Will you be there with me by my side, my girl, my shooter? Who’s to say who calculates? Not me, I’m no computer”
Diving more into the narrative of not knowing what could happen in a relationship, but also not wanting to give up on it just because of that “who knows?” . Caesar’s second runner up “Have a baby (With Me)” this song is about a plea to create a lasting legacy with a partner as their relationship is coming to an end. Creating a family not in the traditional way, but in an emotional attempt to create something permanent– a “new dream” holding on to their love, which is fading.
“There’s no time to believe in what we could be, We could leave something here
It’s too late for our dreams. We can make a new dream, have a baby with me.”
Album Title: Son of Spergy
Artist : Daniel Caesar
Released: Oct. 24, 2025
Number of Songs: 12
My Grade: A+