"Find a Way" is a song by American singer Dwele and the lead single from his debut studio album Subject (2003). It was produced by G-One.
Background
In a 2012 interview with YouKnowIGotSoul.com, Dwele recalled his original ideas for the song and the process of composing it:
I was in L.A. working with G-One and I remember I had a portable CD player and I had burnt a song in the studio and had it in my portable CD player in my headphones on the balcony of my hotel room under palm trees. I had to write this song, this was the jump off song. I just kinda reflected on something that I was going through at the time. I had got a phone call from a girl that I hadn't talked to in a minute and that was fresh in my brain. I wrote that actually in L.A. under palm trees, beautiful weather, and went in and cut the song the next day. In the process of recording the song, I remember saying to G-One and he always brings it up, I stopped the track and said "Man, I don't even wanna be a singer man, I want to be a rapper!" He was like "What! D man you're crazy man, D man if you sing, you're going to have all of the ladies!" I didn't even want to do it and I fought with him and it took us a long time to even finish that song. I was fighting but everything worked out and I'm glad I'm still singing now because I love ladies![1]
Content
The song finds Dwele singing about one trying to restore the love that he and his romantic partner once had for each other.[2]
Critical reception
In his review of Subject, John Bush of AllMusic described "Find a Way" and "Money Don't Mean a Thing" as "intelligent, sensitive jams, but they make it clear that Dwele's talents don't tend to the anthemic."[3] Lynzee Mychael of Michigan Chronicle called the song "a tune that embodied the essence of Detroit's ballroom culture while oozing a sense of sophistication and allure."[4]