The release of Phases, Brandy Norwood’s memoir, on March 31 set off a wave of conversations that the Grammy-winning singer seems entirely prepared to have. Among the most closely watched threads is the one about her younger brother, Ray J, and the growing distance between them that fans have been tracking for years.
Brandy has rarely been the one to put it into words. That changed with her recent cover story in Parade magazine, where she addressed the state of their relationship with a directness that felt less like a reveal and more like a conclusion she had already reached on her own.
Brandy puts the Ray J question to rest, at least for now
She was clear without being dramatic about it. There is distance between them at the moment, she told Parade, and that distance is tied to things Ray J has done publicly that she does not condone. Loving him from afar, she said, is what feels right for her and for her peace of mind. She was equally clear that her love for him has not changed and that his presence runs throughout the memoir in ways that reflect how central he has been to her life.
The acknowledgment lands differently when you consider the context. Ray J spent much of 2024 and 2025 making headlines for statements about being pushed out of the family. He said at the time that he and Brandy were no longer as close as they once were and that he accepted the blame for how things had deteriorated. Notably, he was not at Brandy’s Hollywood Walk of Fame ceremony, an absence that did not go unnoticed.
By the end of 2025, there were signs of a thaw. The two shared a moment onstage during a stop on Brandy and Monica’s ‘The Boy Is Mine Tour,’ which felt like a step toward something. Whether that step held is a harder question to answer now.
What Phases actually covers
The memoir is not solely about Ray J, though his story is woven through it. Brandy also writes about her time on ‘Moesha,’ her role in Cinderella, and her long-documented rivalry with fellow R&B singer Monica, the kind of beef that defined a whole era of music press in the late 1990s and early 2000s.
She wrote about a conversation she had with Whitney Houston before Houston’s death, a moment she has touched on in interviews before but addresses with more depth in the book. The memoir traces the highs and lows of a career that began when Brandy was a teenager and has carried her through more than three decades in an industry that rarely stays gentle for that long.
The promo run for Phases included appearances on ‘The View’ and ‘Good Morning America’ on April 1, alongside the Parade cover, which gave Brandy a platform to speak to all of it at once.
Where Ray J fits into the larger picture
What makes Brandy’s comments about Ray J land the way they do is the restraint behind them. She is not cataloguing grievances or inviting a public back-and-forth. She is describing a position she has arrived at after watching someone she loves make choices she cannot align herself with, and she is doing it without pretending that the love itself is in question.
Phases is available now.

