Friday, May 20, 2016

Ariana Grande: "Dangerous Woman" Review






When Ariana Grande released her sophomore album "My Everything" in 2014, she was launched from Nickelodeon star with R&B cred to a full-fledged pop phenomenon. She claimed no less than four top ten hits from that album, becoming the only artist to achieve the feat that year. However, 2015 wasn't as kind to Ariana: a slew of scandals threatened to tarnish her sweet and bubbly image and turn her into-gasp-a normal, flawed person! Add to that a single highly reductive of her earlier hits ("Focus") and she had a lot to prove with her third album. Cleverly titled "Dangerous Woman", Grande has put the syrupy ballads and air-thin pop-rap aside for a sleek, sexy collection of songs that are her most consistent and sonically fresh. She's not the wide-eyed ingenue of "Yours Truly" anymore--that was made pretty obvious with her "doughnutgate" incident last year--and she's just fine with that. Now that her teen fanbase have grown into young adults, she seizes her first opportunity to be her raw-unfiltered self and have loads of fun while doing it. But this isn't "Bangerz": Grande is looking to exist on her own terms, whereas Miley Cyrus was doing everything in power to shock. Her pipes are still her best trait, but this time she tries harder to enunciate so the lyrics stand-out just as much as the music itself, which keeps the urban-leanings of her first two records but strips away the flimsy hip-hop for soul and house grooves. Though hiring Max Martin to usher in this new sound was a predictable move, Grande actually defies expectations by being so unapologetically sardonic, playing against the conventions of pop and releasing profanities and innuendo with unabashed glee. Maybe "Dangerous Woman" isn't classy like her earlier records, but since most of these songs are way more fun and catchy, it's a small burden. Unfortunately, Grande couldn't let go of her bad habit to feature way too many artists--Nicki Minaj, Macy Gray, Lil Wayne, and Future all make appearances--and naturally it's these songs that don't work. Ariana is self-sufficient, and delivers her best hooks when it's just her and a mic. She mostly consolidates her strong suits for "Dangerous Woman" though, so even if the middle third is highly repetitive, it's saved by sweaty dance tracks that ride their funky beats and keep the mood going the entire way through. Even if Ariana Grande the person has made some bad decisions lately, it actually ends up empowering her music and taking it to a viable direction. This is an album that she can build a better career upon, now that she's making no excuses (or apologies) for her persona.

Recommended Tracks:
Dangerous Woman
Into You
Greedy

No comments:

Post a Comment