
Alaine – Love Again produced by Ghetto Youths International 2026
Alaine’s Love Again feels like a natural fit for a singer who has spent years turning tenderness into one of her strongest calling cards. The song sits in that emotional pocket she has long owned: romance, vulnerability, and the quiet hope that love can be found again after disappointment. That has always been part of Alaine’s appeal. Born in New Jersey and raised in Jamaica, she came up as one of the island’s most recognizable female voices, and her catalog has moved easily between reggae, lovers rock, pop, and gospel-tinged soul. Even when she is singing about heartbreak, there is usually a warmth in the tone that keeps the music open rather than heavy.
Love Again is released through Ghetto Youths International, the Marley family’s imprint, a label with deep roots in roots-reggae and modern Jamaican music. That context matters because it places Alaine inside a catalogue that has long balanced heritage and contemporary radio appeal. The song itself sounds like it was made to sit comfortably in that lane: polished, melodic, and emotional, with the kind of clean vocal treatment that lets her phrasing do most of the work. It reads as a plea and a promise at the same time, the sort of record that speaks to anyone trying to reopen a closed heart.
For Alaine, that message is hardly a stretch. She has built a career on songs that sound personal without feeling overworked, and Love Again continues that line with a mature, steady hand. It is the kind of single that reminds listeners why her voice still carries weight in reggae circles, especially when the subject is love, loss, and the possibility of starting over.
Tracklist:
- Alaine – Love Again
