You're Going To Hate This
Nathan Jarrelle
On You’re Going To Hate This, Nathan Jarrelle turns the aftermath of a long-term relationship into a series of late-night confessions. Across nine songs, memories linger longer than they should, old wounds reopen without warning, and healing arrives in uneven waves. The album isn’t interested in presenting heartbreak as poetic or glamorous. Instead, it sits with the uncomfortable parts: regret, resentment, loneliness, nostalgia, and the quiet realization that moving on rarely happens all at once.
Drawing from 90s R&B, modern Alternative R&B, and melodic rap, You’re Going To Hate This lives in the space between wanting someone back and knowing they shouldn’t return. The production feels intimate and unguarded, giving room for stories that sound less like performances and more like conversations you weren’t supposed to hear.
Influenced by the emotional honesty found in artists like Drake, Bryson Tiller, Giveon, and Summer Walker, the album explores the blurred lines between love, attachment, grief, and self-discovery. What emerges is not a breakup album in the traditional sense, but a document of what happens after the dust settles, when the anger fades and all that’s left are the questions, the memories, and the work of becoming someone new.
