Music Review: History In The Making

Music Review: History In The Making

History in the Making is fresh trio of Jawan Harris, Dylan Allen, and Pryce, and they have been getting some attention with their new single “Walk Away.”

Let me put a picture in your head. A dude and a female are going out. The female has a fine figure and the dude is a player. Not really a player, but doesn’t want to settle down, but at the same time pretty much a player. The dude gets bored and cheats or leaves or something along those lines. When she leaves he realizes that she’s too fine to pass up and that she needs to be wifed up so he hits her up again, but again, gets bored. So basically, he wants to mess around without losing his main. In other words, high school guy problems.

The song itself, is alright. They sync up and work together as one. I thought their voices complimented each other and there was a noticeable harmony. Together, they resemble Jason Derulo or Trey Songz. If RnB was a boy band, History In The Making would be that band. I only had two problems with this song, the siren and Pryce. “Walk Away” seems like it would be on the Usher Pandora station and I was able to vibe with it, but I absolutely hate the sirens. Throughout the song there’s these sirens that kept coming and going and they were pissing me off. Also, there was Pryce’s rap part. Pryce is Lil Wayne before puberty. I’m not saying Pryce doesn’t fit, I’m just saying I hate his voice. Jawan and Dylan’s voices are smooth and soft so it only made sense to throw some rap into the mix to really make this song stand out. But I don’t think Pryce should have made the cut. I feel this song or History In The Making had potential, but in this case, Pryce brought them down.

History In The Making had pretty good shot of making something that can fit in along the lines with Trey Songz or Nicki Minaj. Unfortunately, the triple threat still has some to learn with auto tone and beats. I don’t think they’re that far off though. I wouldn’t be surprised to hear more of them down the road.  I give “Walk Away” a 3 out of 5.