Lianne La Havas by Lianne La Havas

Lianne La Havas‘ previous LP, Blood, almost topped the album chart in the U.K. and was up for a Grammy in the U.S. The singer/songwriter was dissatisfied — not with its reception but with compromises that left her feeling that it wasn’t a pure expression of herself. To name two of them, she had no hand in writing one of the songs, and it was chosen as the second single. Almost five years to the day Blood was released, La Havas offered this corrective move made with her inner circle — her band and longtime creative partner Matt Hales — and a few relative newcomers of her choosing, such as co-producer Beni Giles. Although it was written over the course of a few years, the set covers the trajectory of one relationship and was recorded in concentrated fashion, and it consequently plays out like a complete statement made by a self-contained crew. What’s more, La Havas‘ lithe voice forms a tighter bond with the lyrics, and her gently ringing guitar rarely leaves her hands. The sequencing is nonlinear. It starts around the end, with La Havas waving goodbye and singing of rebirth, and abruptly flashes back to the peak with the rapturous and finely woven “Green Papaya.” Down the line, there are moments of persuasion, trepidation, and hard-fought self-realization, from a prime Hi Records-style ballad (“Paper Thin”), to a nuanced hip-hop soul collaboration with Nick Hakim (“Please Don’t Make Me Cry”), to a wholly illuminated finale (“Sour Flower”). La Havas makes it all flow and mesh by revisiting each moment like it’s the present, using apt metaphors related to plant life and seasonal cycles, and most importantly, by not overselling a single emotion. She and her support don’t really work up a sweat. When they almost break one, as on the intimate rustic disco of “Read My Mind” and the vibrating soul-MPB fusion of “Seven Times,” they do so with a fluency that recalls Maxwell‘s BLACKsummers’night and blackSUMMERS’night, like they rehearsed to perfection and cut mostly live. Another highlight of relative intensity is an update of Radiohead‘s “Weird Fishes.” While it might seem contradictory of La Havas to record a cover and place it in the middle of an album self-titled to stress total control, the song has long been in her set list. She seizes it with a more dynamic arrangement and a robust rhythmic overhaul that evokes OK Computer more than In Rainbows. The increasing sense of relief and joy in her voice as she repeats “Hit the bottom and escape” sounds as personal as anything she wrote.”

AllMusic Review by Andy Kellman

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