Corinne Bailey Rae
The Sea


2.5
average

Review

by Justus0 USER (29 Reviews)
April 1st, 2010 | 6 replies


Release Date: 2010 | Tracklist

Review Summary: In spite of her lauded sincerity, tragedy has left Ms. Bailey Rae musically out to sea.

It was the premature death of her husband, Jason Rae, that kept Corinne Bailey Rae away from the music scene for the four-year hiatus between her eponymous debut album and 2010 release The Sea. One can expect to hear the effects of her loss and grief in the new album and to Bailey Rae's benefit it is to this approach that critics have turned in consideration of her new music.

Rightly, it would be inconsiderate and insensitive not to consider the pain that Bailey Rae has gone through and how it has affected her new songs, but in review, while striving to maintain consistency and fairness, we must also look at the music simply as it stands. Alone. Out at sea. And without a preconceived sensitivity spawned by our connectedness as human beings. Essentially, the question to ask is whether someone with no knowledge of Bailey Rae's misfortune would feel the passion of her experience in the music.

It is immediately apparent that The Sea lacks the catchy radio hits that brought Bailey Rae acclaim as the breakthrough act of 2006. The polished production and archetypal neo-soul drum beats have been replaced with a deeper infusion of jazz and blues. The hooks are mostly forgettable and Bailey Rae herself sounds less accessible, almost as if the music serves as a bubble protecting her from the outside. This barrier depreciates the honest value of her voice and shows that she is not yet ready to let her hair down as a lighter Bailey Rae proclaimed in the 2006 hit "Put Your Records On". But a veil such as this is to be expected, as the album largely is a vehicle to effuse her loss. The problem with this is that in her disclosure there is hardly a memorable moment.

"Closer" provides the album with its one lift while the rest of the tracks tend to drift by as on the sea Bailey Rae seems to be singing of. With a sexy R&B groove in which we find Bailey Rae giving her best Erykah Badu impression, "Closer" sits back in a funky 70s pocket and is poised to be the most widely successful track from the album.

The first two singles released, "I'd Do It All Again" and "Paris Nights/ New York Mornings", are both exemplar of what the rest of the album sounds like. Jazzy and tranquil, most of the work on The Sea takes on a singer/songwriter character that hearkens back to the inception of neo-soul when a guitar still had a place in the mix. Much of current neo-soul relies on synthesized beat heavy jams that are more akin to urban R&B than soul at all, so in this regard we must applaud Bailey Rae for remaining true to herself and her style.

At times Bailey Rae even dabbles with 60s guitar riffs a la The Beatles in songs like "The Blackest Lily", 70s folk in "I Would Like To Call It Beauty", and The Doors-era psychedelic rock in "Paper Dolls". In her experimentation however tends to be her shortcoming when tracks such as "Feels Like The First Time" seem to have something going when a delightfully dirty groove is lost in a haunting yet ultimately unremarkable chorus.

For all of the bright moments strewn throughout Bailey Rae can't seem to piece together a full four or five minutes of notable music. Mostly we are left with a sense of what's lacking, a sense of what could have been, a sentiment I'm sure Corinne herself has been struggling with these past four years since tragedy left her sadly alone amongst the waves.

- Jonathan Kroening
www.itsjustmusic.net



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user ratings (35)
3.5
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other reviews of this album
thebhoy (4)
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Comments:Add a Comment 
thebhoy
April 1st 2010


4460 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

Well written, yes, but I clearly disagree. You seem to knock it for not being as accessible as her previous work.

Justus0
April 1st 2010


23 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

i appreciate the constructive criticism thebhoy. overall it felt a bit unfocused for me, even more so than it lacking accessibility.

atrink
April 1st 2010


2855 Comments


7 reviews in like 10 minutes? holy shit

BigHans
April 1st 2010


30959 Comments


Yeah I would be royally pissed if I had submitted a review today.

Metalstyles
April 1st 2010


8576 Comments


was gonna welcome you to the site, but then saw you had a 2007 join date.

Anyway, the review is actually really solid, but you really shouldn't post 7 reviews in a row. There is an unwritten law of 1 review per day around here and it is very much frowned upon if you post more than 2 reviews in succession. That's also the reason why you have a "0 out of 2 thought this review was well written" rating atm.

Anyway, good stuff, keep writing, just don't post all your reviews in succession, even if you are transfering them over from another site or whatnot.

Justus0
April 1st 2010


23 Comments

Album Rating: 2.5

thanks for the heads up Metalstyles. i was unaware of the unwritten rule (probably cuz it's unwritten), but i'll be sure to post no more than one review a day from here on out. i appreciate your professionalism in bringing this matter to my attention. i've received a lot of childish passive-aggression from most users so far about a rule that i was wholly unaware of.



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