Last year, Gabrielsā secular gospel sounds and rousing pop earned them arguably the highest of compliments. Elton John called the LA-based trio’s 2020 breakthrough single āLove And Hate In A Different Timeā ā a glossy, vibrant foot-stomper that blends classic R&B and swooning choral vocals ā āone of the most seminal records Iāve heard in the last 10 yearsā. As we all know, you don’t argue with the Rocket Man.
This huge endorsement was a clear sign of Gabriels’ hard work finally paying off. Forming like a happy accident six years ago, Sunderland-born producer/keyboardist Ryan Hope and LA producer, composer and violinist Ari Balouzian had initially been working on a film together when, in looking for a voice for the project, they came across Compton gospel singer and choir director Jacob Lusk. This meeting led to the three musicians eventually forming Gabriels, with Balouzian and Hope acting as producers and Luskās thundering vocals taking centre stage. It’s all led up to the arrival of the first part of the three-piece’s debut album ‘Angels & Queens’, with the second instalment of the record due in March 2023.
NME catches up with Lusk as the band are about to join Harry Styles for his week-long residency at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas (which ends tonight, October 3), though the singer wasn’t feeling daunted by either the prospect of the size of the arena stage or playing to Styles’ devout fanbase. “Iām always looking for bigger and better,” Lusk tells NME over Zoom. āBut then I have to sit back and realise, āWait, weāre opening for Harry Styles this evening!’”
After all, Gabriels have past form when it comes to drawing in new fans: they performed to a packed-out crowd at Glastonbury‘s The Park in June, while in May they played at Brighton Dome just before Enny and Tems during a Great Escape showcase ā though this billing was initially cause for concern. “Some of the guys stood there [in the crowd] were deeply masculine, and here I was coming out in a cape inspired by AndrĆ© Leon Talley,” Lusk recalls of the latter gig. But, by the time Gabriels walked off stage, people were āliterally screaming… the young masculine guys were into it, too!ā
A mix of the Black Baptist church tradition, ’60s soul and rhythm and blues (a musical era that has been successfully honoured recently by the likes of Leon Bridges and Michael Kiwanuka), Lusk’s rousing voice has been key in winning Gabriels admirers far and wide. The singer was raised in the Baptist church (he often ends sentences during our chat with āPraise God!ā), and says he believes that his talent and his ability to express emotion through his voice is a gift that feels bestowed to him from a godly power.
While it’s often said that some Black music derives from pain, or even radical joy in the face of racism, Lusk has a different understanding. āItās more that weāre seen to convey those emotions well, whether itās painā¦ though itās almost always joyā, he says, before adding: āMaybe itās the resilience of Black people that gives us that power to express in a different way.ā
The appeal of the kind of music that truly rouses people, including Gabriels, comes from it tapping into something. Lusk calls it āthe Holy Ghostā, but āitās a sense of whatever a higher power means to you,ā he explains. āI used to get offended when people would call me a gospel singer and liken me to gospel artists. I realised that people werenāt saying that Iām a Jesus singer, itās just the only thing that they can liken it to.ā
The deeply personal but hugely relatable content of āAngels & Queensā begins at its artwork, which shows a baptism in action. The typical intention of the practice may be to āwash off an old life, and [be] re-birthed,ā but, as Lusk says, āitās about me in a way. I also wanted to leave it to interpretation too, so people could get whatever they get from it.ā
Death is also another prominent theme across the album, something that Lusk admits to being deeply scared of. āIf You Only Knewā, a tender gospel hymn that sees Luskās warm vocals being supported by a Baptist choir, is thematically about his godsisterās battle with, and eventual death from, addiction. But it also came from Lusk’s bandmates grappling with losing their own family members (Hopeās mother recently passed away from cancer). Gabriels started thinking about what these late loved ones would tell them if they could, eventually determining that theyād want them to go out and live. āSome people die of grief,ā Lusk says. āItās not easy, but I know theyād tell us to get up!ā

Gabriels hunkered down in an LA studio for three weeks earlier this year to put ‘Angels & Queens’ together, recruiting Sounwave ā the masterful producer who’s worked with the likes of Kendrick Lamar, Taylor Swift and BeyoncĆ© ā to add a further level of gravitas to their recording process.
āKendrick came into the studio at one point, tooā¦ā Lusk begins, though he’s cautious to not go into further detail at this point. Compton natives Lusk and Sounwave, though, connected instantly: ā[Sounwave] was incredible. It was refreshing for someone of that calibre to get [our music] and also give us the space to be ourselves.ā
The result is an album that is huge in scope; its expansive production matching Lusk’s gigantic vocals. āTo The Moon And Backā is an operatic venture – the beginning has the feel of an Ennio Morricone composition, before it tentatively tracks back to the gentler sounds of violin and piano to truly spotlight the stunning peaks and bassy troughs of Luskās voice – while āRemember Meā feels like a contemporary ode to Teddy Pendergrass or Luther Vandross. Through Luskās swelling vocals and the band’s all-encompassing sound, āAngels & Queensā is an album that journeys through mortality and the confounding nature of the afterlife. āIāve been meaning to let you know / Itās time now for me to go / This glass ceiling is falling through / Still I am nothing without you,” Lusk sings on the title track.
Gabriels donāt just live by the idea that the sky’s the limit: their music goes far beyond that. āIām not singing to impress anybody,ā Lusk says. āIām just singing now, and whatever I feel, Iāll just let it out.ā These stories will continue to dazzle audiences wherever they go, bringing new converts into the transcendental world of Gabriels.
Gabriels debut album ‘Angels & Queens’ is out now
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