
Lack of Afro’s “Love Dealer” opens like an electric current through the veins of funk, soul, and retro-future pop. This album doesn’t just revisit electronic grooves, it rebuilds them from scratch. Each track feels like a meeting point between analog warmth and digital precision, with rhythms that sound human but pulse like machines. The result is an album that’s equal parts dance floor energy and emotional intelligence.
1. Keeping Me Strong
The album begins on a confident stride with “Keeping Me Strong.” The tempo sits in that sweet groove, steady enough to lock you in but never mechanical. It’s the sound of resilience translated into rhythm. The synth layers glide around soulful basslines, while the percussive textures snap with a tactile crispness. Vocally, it’s an anthem of endurance about love, balance, and holding tight when everything’s falling apart. The emotional core is warm, but the production keeps it sleek, blending soul-inspired melodies with crisp electronic accents that echo 80s modern funk with 2025 clarity.
2. Walls Start Rockin
Here, the energy spikes. “Walls Start Rockin” explodes with syncopated drums, glitchy breaks, and an undeniable live-jam feel. The tempo pushes forward with a drive, somewhere between nu-disco and breakbeat, with just enough grit to feel spontaneous. You can almost picture a live horn section jamming alongside a laptop. The groove is kinetic, relentless, and infectiously fun, carrying an underground energy meant for real-world movement, not streaming passivity.
3. Love Saves The Day
This track is the album’s emotional nucleus. “Love Saves The Day” pulls back the BPM slightly, offering space for melody to breathe. It’s shimmering, nostalgic, and cinematic, like the closing credits of a perfect night. The vocals float in layers of reverb, yet the message stays grounded, with love as renewal, love as rescue. The chord progression leans hopeful without veering into cliché, while the rhythm section keeps it grounded with a heartbeat pulse. It’s electronic soul with intent and a song that balances optimism with introspection.
“Love Dealer” feels like a conversation between vintage funk and modern production. Lack of Afro combinations of sounds, seems to build bridges between eras. The project thrives on groove, structure, and sincerity, proving that electronic music can still feel human, warm, and alive. Each track carries a story through rhythm, and each rhythm feels built by hand, not code.
Check for Lack of Afro on IG: @lackofafro
Follow us for more independent reviews, exclusive artist interviews, and raw music commentary that puts art over hype.Leave a LIKE, a COMMENT, and a SHARE for the artist!






Leave a comment