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EFREM'S MUSIC BOX REVIEW R Kelly - Write
Me Back R Kelly
R Kelly has come through trials and tribulations with a sense of humour, and a rebuilt larynx. Now he wants you to climb on and enjoy the ride!
The life and career of R&B kingpin Robert
Sylvester Kelly has been interesting to say the least. To date he has shifted 50
million albums of his oversexed, overproduced smoochy balladeering and written
and produced tracks for soul titans such as Michael Jackson, Whitney Houston and
Mary J Blige among many others.
But he has also attracted less welcome notoriety
relating to underage girls, leading to child pornography charges (he was
declared not guilty in 2008). While waiting for his trial, he launched a bonkers
yet brilliant musical counteroffensive in the shape of cult “hip-hopera” Trapped
in the Closet, which tells the story of a one-night stand and its complex
consequences through a series of 22 songs and accompanying videos. Its online
popularity has given his beleaguered career some forward momentum again, as did
his unexpectedly classy 2010 comeback album Love Letter, which eschewed his
trademark pseudo-steamy bump’n’grind heavy breathing for the more gentlemanly
strains of old-school soul.
After throat surgery last year, Kelly is back on the
soul train, looking airbrushed and suave on the sleeve of Write Me Back. As the
title implies, it is intended as a follow-up to Love Letter but where the
earlier album took its lead from 60s soul greats such as Ray Charles and Sam
Cooke, Write Me Back is more Stylistics and Stevie Wonder, with the sound of the
70s soul purveyors running through many of the songs.
He had originally intended to follow Love Letter with an album entitled Black Panties. This presumably more explicit booty call is still slated for future release but in the meantime Kelly has decided to stick with the softly softly approach to seduction.
He had originally intended to follow Love Letter with an album entitled Black Panties. This presumably more explicit booty call is still slated for future release but in the meantime Kelly has decided to stick with the softly softly approach to seduction.
You have to admire his chutzpah. On Share My Love, he
manages to frame the lyrical come-on to “populate, let’s get together, populate,
make the world better” in such accurately retro style that it sounds like a
What’s Going On-style inspirational message. In this convincing context, Kelly
is simply doing his humanitarian duty by spreading his seed and it is to the
benefit of the planet he be allowed to conduct a mass seduction.
Although
Write Me Back is essentially a pastiche, it’s a very fluent pastiche on which
Kelly puts his keen production skills and considerable vocal talents to
appealing use. He kicks off with carefree disco paean Love Is before pirouetting
effortlessly on to the cool, breezy Bill Withers-style jam Feeling Single, which
channels the spirit of Soul. There is an innocent Isleys-style insouciance to
Lady Sunday on which he pays tribute to the redemptive power of love – and
suggests that that great love might be music, rather than a woman. The more
lightweight Fool For You, meanwhile, is more of a 60s Motown homage rendered
with a Smokey Robinson sweetness.
Also his tribute (IMO) to The King of Pop Michael
Jackson on a song titled 'You Are My World" which is reminisce of Michael's
"Remember The Time" great song and ode to The King!
Listen:
Listen:
There is a party playfulness to some tracks. The
one-more-for-the-road scenario of Believe That It’s So could have been lifted
straight from an episode of Trapped in the Closet as Kelly realises “I’ve had a
little too much to drink.” Alcohol is his best friend on All Rounds On Me, a
finger-popping rock’n’roll jive on which he captures the fleeting invincibility
conferred by a night on the liquor. By the time he gets to the High School
Musical 60s-themed prom dance bubblegum of Party Jumpin’, he is the testifying
life and soul of the joint.
He doesn’t escape from the footloose revelry without a hangover. There is an Aaron Neville-style catch in his voice as he counts the ways on When A Man Lies. The slightly syrupy mea culpa mood persists on the melodramatic R&B piano ballad Clipped Wings, embellished with fluttering, layered harmony vocals. But just when you think Kelly might finally have learned some humility, he reverts to his signature salacious R&B persona for Green Light, on which he appeals most persuasively for the rumpy-pumpy go-ahead.
He continues the entertaining charm offensive on the bonus tracks, which could outspoof Flight of the Conchords if Kelly’s comic intent could actually be established. The priceless One Step Closer traces his race across town to his paramour’s boudoir (“time must be on our side, cos baby so far every light is a green light”), while Beautiful In This Mirror is a (knowingly?) hilarious entreaty to the lucky lady to look at his manhood in the mirror. “I’m so proud of us babe, it’s a victory,” he salivates. Why, Mr Kelly, the pleasure is surely all ours.
CHRONICLES rating: 5 stars…….A must
get!
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