[情報] Nelly Furtado - Folklore
AMG: ***
RS: **
Unlike some of her modern-day neo-singer/songwriter peers, Nelly
Furtado never hid her ambition or her desire to be an "important"
artist, which was part of the charm of her debut, Whoa, Nelly!
Despite (or perhaps because of) her youth, she was willing to try
anything, blending a number of sounds and styles, all of which were
tied together by her sincerity and audacious desire to say something
grand, or at least say everything grandly. Her musical restlessness
was underpinned by a sensibility that was fundamentally serious but
leavened by sly humor, all of which made Whoa, Nelly! a bracing
listen. Her second album, Folklore, is a bit of a different
situation. Released three years after her debut, it picks up where
the first record leaves off, but it's a much more serious affair, a
situation telegraphed by the album covers. Whoa, Nelly! and Folklore
mirror each other — both bear the same Nelly Furtado logo and both
feature a reclining Furtado, but where the debut was bright, girlish,
and rather innocent, finding her lying to the right in a field, she's
now bathed in warm, dark colors, looking rather sultry as she lies to
the left among a bunch of leaves. The artwork implies she's more
mature, and it's a sentiment that's mirrored in the album titles,
since the plainspoken Folklore lacks the humor of Whoa, Nelly! and
suggests she'd rather play it straight than play around. And that's
the problem with Folklore: though it surely has impressive moments,
the album is a self-conscious, somber affair that takes itself far
too seriously. At this point, Furtado's Achilles' heel is that she
doesn't see a world outside herself. While there's a certain truth to
the old axiom "write what you know," she, like many of her peers,
takes this credo to extremes, believing that every emotional
fluctuation she had in the aftermath of her mild stardom can make for
a captivating album. While some have made great art from a similar
viewpoint, the key is depersonalizing the situation and turning it
toward the universal; for instance, on Nirvana's In Utero, Kurt
Cobain turned his agony into poetry by alluding to it, not
chronicling it, thereby making it resonate to anyone who felt
disillusioned and despairing.
In contrast, Furtado's songs play like entries in a diary, so
consumed with the particulars of her world that they can be
suffocating in their solipsism. To a certain extent, this was true on
Whoa, Nelly!, but since she had yet to reach stardom, she was writing
about more universal subjects. Plus, her thrill in making her first
album was palpable, giving the album a na鴳e, exciting charm. While
there are some interesting musical moments on Folklore — enough to
make it worth a listen — the dogged seriousness and didactic
worldview become a bit overbearing not long before the album is a
quarter of the way finished, particularly since the fusion of
worldbeat and adult alternative pop often seems heavy-handed. Furtado
does have skills and ambition, which makes her music interesting, but
that's not the same thing as compelling or memorable. Much of
Folklore resides in the "interesting" category, never reaching the
effortlessly catchy heights of "I'm Like a Bird" or "Turn Out the
Lights," and given the po-faced soberness of the record, that lack of
catchiness can't help but be seen as her bid to be taken as a
serious, important artist. And Furtado could very well be the
serious, important artist she desires to be, but she'll need to
regain some of the guileless, loose spirit of Whoa, Nelly! and temper
the quirks that make Folklore an awkward transitional album. —
Stephen Thomas Erlewine
--
※ 發信站: 批踢踢實業坊(ptt.cc)
◆ From: 210.85.170.59
討論串 (同標題文章)
Lilith 近期熱門文章
PTT影音娛樂區 即時熱門文章
99
263