Jasmin Taylor: Again
3m 10s
Again is a time-traveling visual love letter that moves through the layered interior worlds of Black womanhood—honoring the past, confronting the present, and imagining a future where choosing oneself isn’t radical, but sacred. Set across four eras—the 1920s, 1950s, 1970s, and today—the video follows one woman navigating the echoes of love, longing, silence, and resilience passed down through generations. Each scene is a carefully curated tableau, reflecting not just aesthetic shifts in style, but emotional shifts in her clarity and conviction.
From the sepia-toned softness of a vanity-lit reflection to the pastel tensions of a retro kitchen, from the grounded solitude of a bohemian den to the stark intimacy of a modern window, Again captures the still moments between leaving and staying, questioning and knowing. Through symbolism—magnolia flowers, the Bible, family heirlooms, and books by Black women thinkers—the visual language is both archival and alive. The presence and absence of her partner throughout the decades becomes a meditation on emotional availability, legacy, and liberation.
As eras blur and converge, the woman begins to reclaim her voice and her gaze. The video doesn’t offer a clear answer to the question “Can we be in love again?” Instead, it holds space for the asking. It is for all women in time—those who were told to wait, those who broke the cycle, and those still deciding.
Again is not simply a music video. It is a reverent act of remembrance, reclamation, and reimagination—anchored in Black Southern femininity, generational grace, and cinematic tenderness.