Syng Saikou looks ahead to 2026, with a stage play, a movie, and a new album on the way. (Photo: Jacorri Washington)

โ€œEverybody is a star,โ€ or so sang Sly and the Family Stone in 1969. But once an artist sees the truth in that, how to make it a reality? Itโ€™s a question that Memphis R&B singer-songwriter Syng Saikou has been grappling with since she was in ninth grade.

Even at that young age, sheโ€™d already been singing for years. โ€œMy kindergarten teacher actually made me sing a solo at my kindergarten graduation,โ€ she says. โ€œSo ever since then, I just get on stage with the mic in my hand. And I definitely was singing in the church as well. I was forced to!โ€ 

Those experiences, and the positive feedback she garnered from them, in turn led her to start writing her own songs at a very young age. โ€œI started writing in the seventh grade,โ€ she says. โ€œAnd I was just writing about stuff that I was hearing about and stuff that I was seeing my mom go through, and my aunties and uncles and people like that. So I was writing based off of their life experiences.โ€

Nowadays, in her late twenties, she writes more than ever, and from her own experience, but the process is not that different from when she started. โ€œI have to be in a secluded, dark space โ€” like the bathroom!โ€ she laughs. Such methods matter little. When opportunity struck, she was ready to produce material on demand. And that opportunity arrived thanks to her alma mater, Sheffield High School. 

โ€œWe had a talent show at school, let me just start there,โ€ Saikou explains. โ€œAnd this coach at the school, he already had a beat, and was like, โ€˜Iโ€™ve got this beat and youโ€™re gonna write to it. Can you write to this?โ€™ And I was like, โ€˜Yeah.โ€™ And so I came back a couple days later [with a song], and he was like, โ€˜Yep, youโ€™re gonna do that at the talent show.โ€™ Like, that wasnโ€™t my plan, but โ€ฆโ€ She shrugs, accepting her destiny.

The song she recorded, โ€œI Told You,โ€ struck a nerve with her fellow students after she performed it at the talent show and then posted it on SoundCloud. โ€œEverybody in the school was just so attached to that song, I guess. Because I was in the ninth grade, I was really young, and they were like, โ€˜This girl got on stage singing about how she just went through a breakup!โ€™โ€

Even after that, Saikou took her time pursuing music more seriously. โ€œI didnโ€™t really record anything else until after I graduated because thatโ€™s when I could do more. So I was holding on to that one song from ninth grade to 12th grade. And by then, you know, I could go to the studio when I wanted to. I just stepped into my artistry.โ€

Her first move in that direction was to create a stage name that expressed her aesthetic. โ€œEvery time Iโ€™d go perform somewhere, at karaoke or performing live with a band or something, somebody in the audience would be like, โ€˜Sing it, girl!โ€™ And I was like, โ€˜Okay, so maybe that should be my name. But instead of the I, Iโ€™m gonna use a Y.โ€™ Then I wanted a foreign last name that would match Syng, so I picked โ€˜Saikou,โ€™ which means โ€˜the bestโ€™ or โ€˜supremeโ€™ in Japanese.โ€

She began performing and soon was sharing the stage with some major artists. โ€œI opened up for Keke Wyatt, R. Kellyโ€™s group Public Announcement, Sir Charles Jones, Anthony Q. People like that.โ€ But things really started to happen in 2019, with January of 2020 seeing the release of her first single, โ€œSoul Tie,โ€ a melodic meditation on a relationship over a beat, layered with synth-harp arpeggios, that sounds positively otherworldly. Over the coming years she would release seven more singles, including โ€œBipolar,โ€ one of the loveliest, most lilting ways to confront mental health challenges one could imagine. She has clearly assembled a stable of different studio wizards who match her vibe perfectly, including one of her primary go-to producers, Michael Barringer.

Finally, this May saw the release of her first album, Saikou: Volume 1, which reveals a strikingly mature artist in her prime. And while she can still write from the point of view of others, like her uncles and aunties, thereโ€™s a deep autobiographical undercurrent to the album that gives it the ring of authenticity. As she proclaims in โ€œKnow Me,โ€ the opening track, โ€œDonโ€™t let my intellect and pretty face deceive you.โ€ 

With that initial mystery, she begins to connect the dots of who she is, especially with the powerful โ€œExistenceโ€: โ€œIโ€™m from Memphis, itโ€™s a liquor store and church on every corner/Itโ€™s a cold world but fasho my city colder.โ€ Thus laying out the context, she then makes it an anthem of self-realization. โ€œCan you understand me?/Patiently waiting for a Grammy/They say you gotta be persistent/I think itโ€™s better if you speak it to existence/Speak it to existence/You gotta speak it to existence, yeah.โ€

That perfectly sums up her attitude and her determination to manifest her dream. Aiding and abetting her on her mission is rapper Big Boogie, whose cameo on โ€œExistenceโ€ cheers her on: โ€œJust push the button on your career, watch you speed up/Get in that bag and donโ€™t look back, you gonโ€™ be up! โ€ฆ You gotta speak it to existence (yeaaaaah)!โ€

Right on cue, Saikou is facing 2026 with a sense of possibilities and hope. โ€œIโ€™m actually in a new movie. It hasnโ€™t released yet. Itโ€™s called Emilyโ€™s Hand, and weโ€™re actually doing a theatrical version at the Crosstown Theater in March. After the stage play is done, the film will come out. And then Iโ€™ll be releasing Volume 2, a feature with Anthony Q., and several videos in early 2026 as well. The video for โ€˜Know Meโ€™ is going to be first. Thatโ€™s the one with the most traction on the radio, and itโ€™s also been placed in the movie. So Iโ€™m really excited!โ€