For a long time, India Shawn was the name you did not know but kept hearing. She sang background for Anderson .Paak, contributed songs to Chris Brown, Monica and Keri Hilson, and built a reputation in the industry as one of the more quietly gifted voices in R&B. The recognition came slowly, and much of it went to other people. That is starting to change.
Now signed to VANTA Music, the label founded by Grammy and Oscar-winning producer D’Mile and Grammy-winning mix engineer John Kercy, Shawn released her EP Subject to Change on May 1. It is the most direct creative statement she has made, and it sounds nothing like the background.
What Subject to Change is actually about
The title works on two levels. Personally, it traces the emotional shifts of someone who falls in love fast and changes direction just as quickly. Shawn describes herself as an Aries through and through, and the project moves the way she does, with feeling and without apology. Listened to from start to finish, the songs map a specific emotional arc.
Creatively, the title signals a shift away from traditional R&B toward something more experimental and harder to categorize. Shawn is not announcing a final form. She is documenting a transition.
D’Mile executive produced the project, with producer Spencer Stewart handling Rain on Me. The rollout began late last year with Kill Switch, followed by Cotton Candy. The focus track is Marmalade, and it is the one that best explains where Shawn is sonically.
Shawn built her sound around the 70s, not the 90s
While most of her R&B contemporaries have been mining the 90s and early 2000s for inspiration, Shawn went further back. The reference points she gravitates toward are Stevie Wonder and Roberta Flack, layered with an alternative sensibility that keeps the music from feeling like a museum piece. Marmalade is the purest expression of that instinct. It is warm, groovy and built for movement.
The decision was deliberate. Shawn has been watching what her peers are doing and respects it, but she is not chasing the same nostalgia. She is after something that feels true to her, and what feels true is the 70s.
Kill Switch put the industry on notice
When Kill Switch dropped, it landed coverage in Rolling Stone, Billboard, Vibe and Essence. For an artist who had spent years contributing to other people’s projects, that kind of attention carried real weight. Shawn had set out to make something that stopped people, something that announced a different kind of artist. The response confirmed she had done exactly that.
That moment also matters because the road to it was not short. The music industry has changed significantly since Shawn began her career, and sustaining momentum through those shifts takes more than talent. She has spoken openly about the burnout that comes with the climb and the fact that peer respect, the knowledge that artists she admires appreciate her work, is what pulls her through the harder stretches.
What she wants listeners to take away from Shawn’s EP
Subject to Change is not asking for anything heavy from its audience. After the introspective weight of her 2022 album Before We Go Deeper, Shawn wanted to make something that moved. The new project is looser and more playful, closer in spirit to her experimental Outer Limits EP with James Fauntleroy than to the cerebral work that preceded it.
The listeners she is thinking about most are the ones who are also making things. Many of her fans are creatives and aspiring artists, and the freedom audible in the recording is part of what she hopes they carry with them. Not a message, exactly. More like proof that creative freedom is possible, and that it sounds good.
Subject to Change is out now on all major streaming platforms.Stream it on Apple Music, Spotify, YouTube, and all major platforms. Follow India Shawn on social media for everything coming next.

