grandson and Jessie Reyez Join Forces For "Rain," Set to Appear on 'The Suicide Squad' Soundtrack

image

Sometimes the best things in life are those you least expect. Like, let's say… another Suicide Squad movie, albeit this time it's written and directed by James Gunn and exists somewhere in-between the nebulous realm of standalone sequel and reimagining. Or let's just say a collaborative single from rapidly rising alternative rocker grandson and Grammy-nominated R&B artist Jessie Reyez. While I unfortunately cannot show you the former for obvious legal ramifications, I am happy to announce that "Rain" sees grandson and Reyez join forces to deliver one hell of an atmospheric slowburn.

"Rain" marks the first single from grandson since the release of his debut studio album Death of an Optimist, which saw the lauded Canadian-American alternative rocker tackling everything from political apathy to political corruption. Set to appear on the forthcoming The Suicide Squad soundtrack, "Rain" is fittingly cinematic in nature.

Opening on the heavenly meld of grandson and Reyez's softly sung vocals, the new collaborative duo set the stage in a deceivingly serene fashion. The change-up comes moments later as the alternative rocker's falsetto skitters over ominous, brooding production. Like a passing rainstorm, this soon gives way to another palatable shift, as Reyez's heavenly lilt returns to complement the cathartic climax.

Reyez and grandson are an unexpected match made in heaven. Delivering on the former's unmistakable talent for crafting brooding, atmospheric R&B and the latter's penchant for larger-than-life, cathartic alternative rock, "Rain" is the best of both worlds - a cinematic, stadium-ready anthem.

Listen to "Rain" below:


Related Articles

Keo Refuses to be Labeled

Keo Refuses to be Labeled

July 2, 2026 Despite being mischaracterized as a maverick guitar band for Gen-Z, Keo’s music demonstrates multi-generational appeal, their reckless sound derived from bands such as Pearl Jam and Nirvana, attempting to put listeners onto comparable music from previous eras.
Author: Noah Wade
Keo
How Hailey Picardi Unlocked The Key To Healing in Striking Debut ‘scars to prove it’ [Q&A]

How Hailey Picardi Unlocked The Key To Healing in Striking Debut ‘scars to prove it’ [Q&A]

June 5, 2026 The dichotomy of comfortability and chaos her music thrives within is perfectly captured in hues of deep pink and sunset orange, as she looks out over a vast ocean of intimidating possibilities.
Author: Giselle Libby
pop
EP
PIAO Grapples With Identity On New Single “if i am me, then who are you?”

PIAO Grapples With Identity On New Single “if i am me, then who are you?”

March 20, 2026 PIAO’s new single sees the artist interrogating her own feelings surrounding this question, pairing introspective lyrics with glitchy production.
Author: India McCarty
pop