Kelela - Take Me Apart

Pitchfork 86

Kelela’s debut album is technically stunning and emotionally realized. It lives in a new, outré, rhythmic pop galaxy that honors but outpaces its peers.

Fri Oct 06 05:00:00 GMT 2017

The Guardian 80

(Warp)

When Washington-born singer Kelela released her first mixtape, Cut 4 Me, in 2013, her fusion of sumptuous R&B vocals and harsh, avant garde electronica made a splash. But in the four years since, alternative R&B has gone from bleeding edge to genre du jour: in a class now crowded with thoroughly modern divas, has anyone has been saving Kelela a seat? As her debut album opens, the idea that the singer may have been left behind by the sound she helped establish doesn’t seem outlandish: Frontline is funky but plodding and retro in its staccato style. Thankfully, Take Me Apart soon proffers tracks that are both pop-minded and gratifyingly future-facing. Producer Arca may be her not-so-secret weapon in the latter regard, creating sublime but techy sonic hellscapes among the ambient synths and skittering beats.

Meanwhile, Kelela’s vocal stops Take Me Apart ending up as a fragmented series of sounds: consistently exquisite as it dances between lovesick confusion and shrewd sensuality.

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Thu Oct 05 21:00:34 GMT 2017

The Guardian 80

(Warp)
The LA-based singer fuses old-school vocals with cutting-edge music on her alluring debut

Can one successfully rewind and fast-forward at the same time? Kelela, it seems, is a dab hand at it. Over the course of one celebrated mixtape, 2013’s Cut 4 Me, a 2015 EP, Hallucinogen, and, now, her long-awaited debut album, one of the most arresting new voices in R&B has created a deft stitch in time, laying 90s R&B vocals over cutting-edge digital production techniques. If that summary seems reductionist or formulaic, it shouldn’t: Take Me Apart is a very spacious operation in which the 34-year-old ponders love, lust and hurt as soundbeds break down around her.

LMK, the lead track, is Kelela’s most accessible case in point. As hyper-modern come-hither, it finds Kelela propositioning someone. “No one’s tryna settle down,” she breathes, “all you gotta do is let me know.” A pretty keyboard twinkle and some throwback handclap beats become wedded to doomy resonances, courtesy of producer Jam City, who throws in fast-forwarding audio tape squeak for good measure. Half a dozen Kelelas weigh in, on ecstatic “oh”s, little half-spoken raps, on FKA twigs-like high notes. The no-strings hook-up is a standard trope of pop music, but Kelela is nobody’s disposable night friend.

Related: The best albums of 2013: No 7 – Cut 4 Me by Kelela

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Sun Oct 08 08:00:45 GMT 2017

Tiny Mix Tapes 60

Kelela
Take Me Apart

[Warp; 2017]

Rating: 3/5

If we say that the personal is inherently political, can that be enough? Take Me Apart stakes itself in totality on an answer in the affirmative.

On the one hand, the album lies very much in the lineage of (seemingly) apolitical romance that’s been the majority positionality of music in the genres that make up the past to its “future R&B” (R&B itself, jazz, neo soul). And indeed, which has been the raison d’être of “pop” music tout court, as the romantic and the sexual took the place of religion as a source of transcendental meaning and of the identity of the self in secular society.

On the other, Kelela in interviews clearly positions the work in the lineage of recent artists explicitly speaking from and to blackness — Solange, Beyoncé, and Kendrick Lamar (and perhaps in a more similarly sideways fashion, Frank Ocean). And she explores the experience of being a woman in a patriarchal world who’s making music in a patriarchal industry. These two facets of identity can’t be unknitted, either in her reflections (an apt word for this album, as we’ll see) or in the music itself.

Conceptually, then, Take Me Apart is a statement made very much in the face of misogynoir, the place where racism meets sexism. Kelela has self-questioned the lack of any overt reference to blackness on the album, but argues that portraying tenderness and vulnerability in and of itself should be read as an act of feminist blackness and of defiance. Having said that, her claims to portraying the very existence of female sexual desire, and particularly a masochistic female role equivalent to a power bottom, as revolutionary or rebellious in and of themselves don’t quite ring true in the raunch culture era.

To problematize this positioning is not to say that the problems she identifies don’t exist — they very much do. But the freight of significance that the album carries is more fascinating in the web of discursive meaning Kelela has woven around it than in the album itself. Which is perhaps representative of the limitations of music’s possibilities to speak truth to power in an age of self-empowerment philosophy. An age where to break silence is a political act that happens so repetitively that it constitutes rather than deconstructs the machine. An age where it’s the fate of political works of art to become unintentional simulacra, making their claims from foundations too slick to provide the necessary purchase in a world where resources both literal and discursive are proceeding to exhaustion.

And the exteriors here are too smooth. There are a few interesting janks beneath the surface, the kind we associate with Kelela’s previous work and with the Night Slugs/Fade to Mind artists featured here, who at their best serve up a divine mélange of dissonance and earworm. Of such were Kelela’s finest moments until now, and a handful of tracks here (“Frontline,” “Better,” “Onandon”) begin to capture the same vibe. But for the most part, Take Me Apart is sonically more akin to a soundtrack, one for neon-tinged late-night driving. Or for bedrooms with ceiling mirrors — those slippery reflections…

Tue Oct 10 04:01:15 GMT 2017