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Before
she even dropped her US debut, "Back
to Black" on March 13th, London songstress
Amy Winehouse sold out concerts across
the country – 4 being in musical
capital, New York. Say what you want about
her, but that wasn't done on hype alone.
The 11-track album toys with falling in
and out of love, lust, and reality. The
emotions come through the raw and mature
lyrics. When connected with the vintage
60's sound, a unique vibe is created.
One not heard in music scene today. For
example the title track which has a dark
and bitter feel when communicating the
emptiness of ending an affair - a theme
continued on ballads, 'Love Is A Losing
Game' (when her vocals shine the most)
and 'Wake Up Alone'.
The emotion shifts on the carefree reggae
influenced track, 'Just Friends', which
has her investigating friends exploring
their desires. She goes from that uncertainty
to assurance with lines like 'We need
to find a time to just do the shit together/For
it gets worse/I want to touch you'. It
helps highlight Winehouse's ability to
design her songs to tell a story. 'Me
and Mr. Jones is another example of that.
The slow jam is reminiscent of an old
school being sung by a jazz singer in
a smoked out club.
The up-tempo joints positively offset
the album and shows off the production
creativity of Mark Ronson and Salaam Remi.
Lead single, 'Rehab' takes on the media's
obsession with Winehouse's rumored offstage
antics. The distinct elements like the
claps, snaps, and breaks give the song
a gospel sound. Another fast jam to mention
is 'Tears Dry On Their Own', which has
writing credits that include famous soul
duo, Ashford and Simpson. It has a smooth
groove to it and is very powerful and
contagious. She gives brutal honesty in
the form of superb lyrics.
'You Know I'm No Good' actually appears
twice on this release – once with
a rap and adlibs from Ghostface Killah.
The song comes across quite humorous.
After getting caught cheating, the answer
Winehouse sings in her defense is the
chorus – 'I cheated myself like
I knew I would/I told you I was trouble/You
know that I'm no good'. The horns give
it a nice vibe. And the remix with Ghostface
allows the song to take on another perspective
actually - the male side of the affair.
'Back to Black' in its entirety speaks
for itself. Oh, before I forget –
wanted to mention that Winehouse also
plays guitar on 3 songs. Her attitude
and persona accentuate the vibe without
overshadowing the talent. There's the
curiosity of seeing if she'll live up
to the chatter. Sure you can get caught
up in the tabloids and image of her, but
me personally, it's quite simple –
I just want to listen to chill and listen
to some good music – and this qualifies
as just that.
The
album receives 4 GeoGlobes.
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