Billboard album reviews: Mariah Carey, Kooks

Fri Apr 11, 2008 7:51pm EDT
 
Email | Print | | Reprints | Single Page
[-] Text [+]

ARTIST: MARIAH CAREY

ALBUM: E=MC2

NEW YORK (Billboard) - She's proclaimed emancipation before, but Mariah Carey's never sounded as free as she does on her 10th album. The usual hummable radio hip-hop and bold ballads are here, in pristine form. ("Bye Bye," a memorial for a lost loved one, is particularly effective.) But so are some coy surprises, like the irresistible "I'm That Chick" (which covertly samples "Off the Wall" for an early Michael Jackson disco bounce) and the Swizz Beatz-produced "O.O.C.," which is catchy enough to make that the vernacular's standard abbreviation for "out of control." Carey even digs deep and pulls up "Side Effects," a Scott Storch-produced, dark hip-hop track that follows a passive woman's descent into domestic abuse ("Sleeping with the enemy/ Aware that he was smothering every last part of me"). Capping it off with Bible-quoting, upright-piano gospel ("I Wish You Well"), Carey's made a pop album with equal parts levity and gravity.

ARTIST: RYANDAN

ALBUM: RYANDAN (DECCA)

Overseas, the pop-classical movement steams ahead, with acts like Andrea Bocelli, Il Divo and Three Graces consistently topping album charts. Comely Canadian-based identical twins Ryan and Dan Kowarsky have already hit the top 10 at home, and now their sights are set on the United States. Opener "Like the Sun" sets the stage, with abundant vocal bravado and a melodramatic torrent of orchestral strings. More restrained "The Face" is utterly luscious, as is a sweetly reinvented cover of "I'll Be There," the poppiest offering here, and stirring finale "Tears of an Angel," which the boys wrote about the passing of their young niece.

ARTIST: THE KOOKS

ALBUM: KONK (ASTRALWERKS)

The Kooks aren't exactly redefining the sound of British pop/rock on their sophomore album, but they certainly aren't giving it a bad name either. The midtempo "See the Sun" doesn't bring the heat as much as the title implies, but single "Always Where I Need to Be" is the real scorcher, with heavy guitar lines and Luke Pritchard's boyish yelp carrying the tune. "Do You Wanna," with the sublimely familiar refrain of "Do you wanna make love to me?," could be an easy commercial hit. But it's on tracks like "Gap" and "Tick of Time" where the young foursome earns its stripes, with stripped-down, soulful songs that show off its wit and musicianship.   Continued...

 

Featured Broker sponsored link

Editor's Choice

Photo

A selection of our best photos from the past 24 hours.  View Slideshow 

Most Popular on Reuters

Photo
Bearing Witness
Reuters award-winning multimedia piece, reflecting five years of reporting the war in Iraq.