128. Missax - Jennifer White - Whatever We Want... Updated -
128. MissaX — Jennifer White — "Whatever We Want..."
- Track number: 128
- Title: Whatever We Want...
- Artist: Jennifer White
- Project / Series: MissaX
- Format: Single (studio)
- Duration: 3:42
- Release date: April 7, 2026
- Genre: Alternative R&B / Neo-soul
- Label: MissaX Records
- Writers: Jennifer White, Marcus Hale, L. Ortega
- Producers: Marcus Hale (primary), L. Ortega (co-producer)
- Mixing engineer: Priya Shah
- Mastering engineer: Tom Reyes
- Recording locations: The Orchard Studios (Brooklyn, NY); Halo Room (Los Angeles, CA)
- ISRC: US-MX1-26-0128
- Catalogue number: MXR-128
- Credits / Personnel:
Production Polish – After the vocal was locked, MissaX spent the next two months fine‑tuning the mix. They introduced a side‑chain‑gated sub‑bass that gives the track its pulsating heart, added a filtered piano riff that resurfaces every 32 bars, and layered a subtle field‑recorded crowd chant that adds an almost live‑show feel to the breakdown.
“I was messing around with a filtered Roland TB‑303 line, trying to get that classic acid feel without sounding retro. When Jennifer laid down the vocal topline, the whole vibe shifted. It became less about the groove and more about the message—‘we’re taking back control of our own narrative.’” 128. MissaX - Jennifer White - Whatever We Want...
Autonomy and Choice: The title itself serves as a thematic anchor, exploring the power of individual decisions within modern adult cinema. Track number: 128 Title: Whatever We Want
- Mutual Transgression: There is no victim here, only co-conspirators. This makes the eroticism more complex, as the tension comes from shared risk rather than power imbalance.
- The Banality of Forbidden Desire: The setting is deliberately mundane—likely a living room or kitchen. MissaX often avoids fantastical locations. By placing the drama in a recognizable environment, the film argues that these desires are not extraordinary; they are ordinary things people suppress daily.
- Release from Performance: Jennifer White’s character often begins the scene performing a role (the responsible adult, the rule-enforcer). The arc of the scene is the shedding of that performance. When she finally embraces "whatever we want," she is not becoming immoral; she is becoming authentic.