Raye comes out swinging on her new album, This Music May Contain Hope
5 hours ago Mark SavageMusic correspondent How satisfying has it been to witness the transformation of Rachel Agatha Keen? Five years ago, the singer - better known as Raye - made a bid for freedom, cutting ties with record label who'd forced her to make generic dance tracks she dismissed as "really boring".
Powered by singles like Escapism and Oscar Winning Tears, it won a record-breaking six Brit Awards, including album of the year, which resulted in Raye "ugly crying on national television". So how do you follow that up?
Speaking to the BBC last year, she admitted to a momentary crisis of confidence.
"When you haven't written for a long time, you start being extremely self-critical. So I was hating everything I was coming out with," she said.
"I think the pressure is always going to be there, no matter what.
But the luxurious thing now is that the pressure comes from me - because that wasn't the case in the past. "
Rather than surrender to those setbacks, Raye saddles up and sets off in search of happiness. Musically-speaking, she comes out swinging.
"So I was really excited to really, really experiment with that quite vividly. "
The narrative quickly cuts to South London, where heartbreak's as prevalent as the pigeons. She sings of "aimless" men with "spliffs hanging off their lips" on Beware… The South London Lover Boy, a song that uncovers the missing link between the Andrews Sisters and Beyoncé (finally!).
As his deceit becomes apparent, the music shifts from crisp hip-hop beats to a hard-boiled film noir crescendo.
Except, instead of drowning her sorrows in a blur of drugs and meaningless sex, she calls up her girlfriends, applies her best waterproof mascara and gets the emotional support she needs. That song ushers in the light.
Similarly Joy, a duet with her sisters Amma and Absolutely, has all the unfettered exuberance (and some of the strings) from Michael Jackson's Don't Stop Til You Get Enough.
Elsewhere, we're treated to a duet with soul legend Al Green, an ironically upbeat ode to body dysmorphia (I Hate The Way I Look Today) and acres of spoken word narration.
Throughout, Raye sings like her life depends on it.
The album is overstuffed, eccentric, kitsch, dramatic and a little bit exhausting.
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