FANFARE July 2016 | Page 38

R E VI E WS *** Rihanna Anti - Roc Nation, 2016 By Philip Josse Dark, brooding and claustrophobic, this is Rihanna’s least commercial offering so far, and a world away from the melodic confidence of her previous work. The album is highly textured, and she layers trap beats over stuttering samples and reggae-inspired vocals. Many songs appear to have been inspired by Rihanna’s Bajan heritage, and her vocals particularly seem highly influenced by the reggae and soul music of Barbados. Vocally, the album is uneven. And on tracks such as Love on the Brain and Close to You she sounds passionate and electric, moving to indifference on James Joint. The early tracks are ruled by production values, showcasing the talents of the 23 producers credited on the label. But 36 towards the end, the backing sounds are stripped back, the heavy, syncopated beats taking a back seat to jazz-inspired melodies, and even the synthesizer is replaced by the violin. This is Rihanna’s first album not to be heralded by a global chart-topping hit. And though fairly banger free, it was preceded by the single Work featuring Canadian rapper Drake, which failed to break into the top five in any major chart. Rhianna is no songwriter and so has been able to put out an album almost every year since her 2005 debut with Music of the Sun. But this latest offering is her first album in over two years, the longest she has gone without a release. And even then, the album came out in fits and starts, much less smoothly than her other releases. So, a tweet in late 2014 said the album would be out ‘soon’, but it was repeatedly pushed back, until a release in February 2016. But even that date proved a movable feast, as a “program- ming