četvrtak, 23. kolovoza 2012.

Jessie Ware - Devotion





Ovo je superstar-mainstream koji bi ipak mogao biti slušljiv - u nekim trenucima. Treba još vidjeti u kojima.











In early 2010, shortly after touring as a backup singer for optimistic Brit-rocker Jack Peñate, south Londoner Jessie Ware quietly snuck into the Internet’s consciousness. Electronic music producer SBTRKT used her sugary vocals on a number of tracks, and she appeared several times with him in concert. “Strangest Feeling,” her ethereal first single, dropped last October, and the instantly-viral music video for “Running” appeared this February. Her quiet, reserved nature and stunning voice made Devotion one of the most highly anticipated albums of the year.
This pre-début hype certainly speaks to Ware’s massive talent, but it also signals the shifting landscape of R&B as a genre. This year, the charts have proven that a modest, introspective record like Frank Ocean’s Channel Orange can skyrocket past the blustering racket of artists like Usher and Chris Brown. Ware’s following expands the field in a whole other direction. She occupies the uncultivated ground between R&B and dubstep, pairing rugged electronic beats with her classic soul voice. The result sounds like the 21st century’s answer to Sade.
And then there’s Ware’s persona. She forgoes the bravado associated with the Drake/Minaj side of R&B, instead projecting an image of unassuming reservation. She once claimed that “being a backing singer was [her] idea of heaven,” and her she initially aspired to be a documentary filmmaker. More recently, as it became clear that her burgeoning solo career was more than a fluke, she expressed interest in being a “private pop star, like Annie Lennox.” She’s not exactly clamoring for the superstardom to which many rising performers aspire. The very picture or restraint, Ware seems in equal parts surprised and pleased by her popularity. In interviews, she speaks as if she didn’t choose this path for herself; fame and talent chose her.
Ware’s humility echoes throughout Devotion, a navel-gazing record that deals with the emotional trials of love. Ware’s controlled, precise vocals waft over rugged electronic beats and distinctly 80s riffs. Devotion opens with the title track, a tender plea for commitment. Its electronic tinkling is reminiscent of Ware’s SBTRKT collaborations, and her quiet, distant voice feels somehow glacial. On “Wildest Moments,” Ware ditches the emotional detachment for strong, deliberate percussion and more commanding vocals. Lyrically, she stays true to R&B tradition, addressing the pain of crumbling love (“from the outside / everyone must be wondering why we try / why do we try?”). But the sheer passion of it all trumps what might otherwise seem cliché. Instead, it verges on tragedy.
On songs like “Running” and “Night Light,” Ware shows off her vocal firepower — to an extent. She harbors obvious range and force, but consistently cuts just short of the vampy riffing that American Idol contestants love so much. Maybe it’s her humble beginnings as a backup singer and aspiring journalist, but this display of restraint places Ware on a plateau of maturity that evades most breakout artists. In the one-shot music video for “Wildest Moments,” a statuesque Ware revolves slowly before a white background, staring soulfully into the camera through half-closed eyes. We never see below her waist. In this video, and throughout Devotion, Jessie Ware seems less like a pop star are more like an ancient icon, an untouchable marble deity.
At times, Devotion breaks from intimate catastrophe for a few tracks of Prince-like daring. On “Still Love Me,” Ware trills over clubby synths, demanding the attention of anyone this side of 1983. Meanwhile, “No To Love” begs for an explanation of rejection as a deep, staticky male voice intones “who / says no / to love.” Both tunes further underscore Ware’s mythical quality, as she brims with self-assured outrage at an unworthy lover (“if I make myself understood / will you treat me like you know you should”).
Sonically, Devotion is not terribly cohesive. “Something Inside” and “Strangest Feeling” trickle through expansive electronic soundscapes, while “110%” sprints haltingly over enticing samples. Yet thematic consistency and Ware’s unmistakable pipes weave together the disparate instrumental elements seamlessly. In fact, as Ware skims from melancholy (“I’ve been having the strangest feeling / that you walked out on me one evening”) to seduction (“with bodies jerking / but I’m still working / I’m new to moving / and we can play hard”), what might otherwise be called inconsistency comes off as scope. It’s pretty impressive.
Ware bridges modernity — electronic beats and impeccable production — and nostalgia — a classic soul voice and pure emotional ardor — to form a record that feels both relevant and timeless. A study in contradictions, Devotion is intimate but indignant, comforting but disarming. Rejecting all self-indulgence, Ware has put forth a polished and gorgeous début that celebrates restraint and redefines R&B. - Gina Cargas
  1. 9.0 |   The Line Of Best Fit

    A strong début from such a promising talent that offers qualities and sounds we all forgot we liked
    Read Review
  2. 9.0 |   The Fly

    This debut’s sophistication might mean Jessie slinks to the forefront rather than shoving her way to the top, but however long it takes, ‘Devotion’ marks a new chapter in this future-pop superstar’s journey
    Read Review
  3. 8.5 |   Pitchfork

    Her success thus far - and its likely continuation thanks to Devotion - is a testament to both her talent and budding songwriting skills, as well as the wide-open field that is modern R&B
    Read Review
  4. 8.5 |   BBC

    Devotion is the sort of sophisticated, soulful pop record that comes along all too rarely, a collection that never hides the heart on its sleeve
    Read Review
  5. 8.3 |   Beats Per Minute

    Ware might still be feeling out her surroundings, but considering the results, getting to see that evolution take place is an exciting and exceedingly worthwhile prospect, especially if it means we get song-of-the-year contenders like “Wildest Moments”
    Read Review
  6. 8.0 |   NME

    A record filled with moments that bring you to your knees. Print edition only
  7. 8.0 |   The Guardian

    Throughout Devotion you're never told to sit up and pay attention. Instead it quietly works its magic, a genuinely individual statement by an artist who didn't expect to become a pop star, but might struggle to stop it happening anyway
    Read Review
  8. 8.0 |   Slant Magazine

    NEW While she can occasionally come off like a more refined Katy B, she wisely eschews dupstep in favor of smooth, midtempo cuts like "Sweet Talk" and soul ballads like the stunning "Taking in Water"
    Read Review
  9. 8.0 |   The Digital Fix

    An excellent juxtapositioning of elegance and the unsettling, Ware delicately harmonising over aggressive cuts
    Read Review
  10. 8.0 |   Drowned In Sound

    A solid album of strong, emotive pop music
    Read Review
  11. 8.0 |   The Arts Desk

    There isn't a weak song on the record, the atmosphere is constant, and Ware's velvet croon and rich harmonies seem effortless
    Read Review
  12. 8.0 |   Q

    If given the chance, Devotion could knock the stuffing out of the charts. Print edition only
  13. 7.0 |   Clash

    A strong and accomplished debut, and Jessie Ware has provided the missing link between SBTRKT and Sade
    Read Review
  14. 6.0 |   The Scotsman

    NEW If only her namesake Jessie J had a fraction of the class of South London soul singer Jessie Ware, what a more bearable place the music world would be
    Read Review
  15. 6.0 |   Independent on Sunday

    You wish, to take two of her professed influences, that she was a little less Sade, and a little more Chaka Khan
    Read Review
  16. 4.5 |   Bowlegs

    Ware’s previous collaborations confirm her talent, but this album lacks substance and has definitely fallen victim to over-hype
    Read Review

Nema komentara:

Objavi komentar