‘I Should Have Known’

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Sade’s first song in six years, ‘Young Lion,’ is tender apology to trans son, Izaak.

Song will feature on the Red Hot Organization’s upcoming Transa compilation and is available now via Transa: Selects EP
 
By Kory Grow (Rolling Stone)

On “Young Lion,” Sade‘s first song in six years and her contribution to the upcoming Transa compilation, the artist apologizes to her son, Izaak, for not understanding him better when he began transitioning genders. “Young man, I feel so heavy for you, you must have felt so alone,” she sings over a slow piano line and cinematic strings. “The anguish and pain, I should have known.” By the chorus, she recognizes his journey: “Young gun, see how far you’ve come.”

Izaak Adu, Sade’s son, recently told Rolling Stone that “Young Lion” meant the world to him. “Though there was nothing I needed to forgive her for, the lyrics ‘Forgive me, son, I should have known,’ struck a chord,” he said via email. “My mum never tried to oppress the boy; I silently always knew I was. She always let me be me.”

“Young Lion” adds gravity and understanding to Transa, a new compilation celebrating trans people that the Red Hot Organization produced. The expansive, nearly four-hour album will come out digitally on Nov. 22, but Sade’s contribution, along with others by André 3000, Sam Smith, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Lauren Auder, and more, is coming out first on Transa: Selects, a newly released sampler EP that’s available digitally and on vinyl. Transa: Selects is available to purchase or stream now.

Sade got involved in the comp when one of the producers, Massima Bell, who is trans, wrote her a personal letter. “The support you’ve publicly given your son has been transformative,” Bell wrote. “I know that I would have had an easier experience navigating my own coming out if my family could have seen examples of support like yours. I feel that you’re in a unique position to be able to help shape a narrative that supports and uplifts trans people.” When Bell finally heard the song, she was overwhelmed. “I was in tears because it just was so…,” she told Rolling Stone. “Her voice felt so charged.”

Izaak’s reaction to the song is a lot like Bell’s. “I thought, ‘Wow, incredible, she’s done it again,’” he said. “Though initially meant as a personal ‘letter,’ written for my 21st birthday, I think the world must hear it.”

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