James Blake - Assume Form

Drowned In Sound 70

Remember when they called James Blake a ‘sad boy’? Well, you could pretty much say that this is his sonic response to that taunt. Although not exactly an album brimming with feel-good anthems, Assume Form does see the London master of glitchy ambience return with a collection of tunes that drip in romance, hopefulness and what seems to be a generally brighter outlook on life. But then, love can do that. Even the artwork speaks volumes about Blake’s headspace these days – gone is the imagery of distortion, gloom and blurriness, and instead here’s a headshot of the artist that is clear, visible and making direct eye contact with you. As far as its symbolism goes, it’s a good representation of the kind of attitude Blake returns with on his fourth album – he’s literally assumed form and appears to have got his shit together in terms of letting his reservations go and allowing other people into his world. There’s still lots of raw emotion and heart-on-sleeve confessional subject matter on here, but there’s a twist this time – this is actually a gushing love letter penned by a bloke that can’t believe his luck at landing his dream girl.

It’s no secret that this record has ‘Jameela Jamil’ written all over it since Blake’s relationship with the DJ/actress inspired most of the 12 songs, and it’s genuinely interesting and refreshing to hear the smitten tone of tracks like ‘Can’t Believe The Way We Flow’, ‘Are You In Love’, ‘I’ll Come Too’ and ‘Lullaby For My Insomniac’. It’s also not surprising then that these are the tracks that serve as highlights of the album, perhaps with the exception of the André 3000-guested ‘Where’s The Catch’, which is a four-on-the-floor bass-heavy number featuring distorted guitars and darker leanings in comparison to the rest of the songs. And there’s plenty of other impressive collaborators too – Travis Scott, Metro Boomin, Moses Sumney and breakout Catalonian artist Rosalía all contribute their unique magic to make this an incredibly diverse offering, particularly during the first half of the record.

But it’s really the warm, soulful beauties like ‘Can’t Believe The Way We Flow’ that define what this album is about, also serving as a reminder that Blake truly is the king of minimalistic glitchy twists and turns. Skilfully blending multi-tracked harmonies and hip hop samples with sugary vintage-sounding doo-wops, he sings to his beloved: “I could’ve used you in the early days… You waive my fear of self”. So yeah, there’s still a bit of vulnerability there but there’s also a strong sense of relief and gratitude that he doesn’t have to face things alone anymore. The hauntingly abstract production rolls on into ‘I’ll Come Too’, which turns into a sweet, chirpy and romantic little tune with beautiful strings providing a backdrop to hopelessly-devoted-to-you type lyrics, pledging “I do, I do, I do… Oh, you’re going to the brink? I’m going there too, why don’t I come with you?” Meanwhile, ‘Lullaby For My Insomniac’ gives a whole new meaning to less-is-more with multi-tracked vocals serving as a one-man-choir while Blake intimately croons “I’ll stay up too, I’d rather see everything as a blur tomorrow if you do”. Sigh.

Shapeshifting, swooning, spacious and echoing, ‘Assume Form’ defies genres once again while delving further into glitchy, cutting-edge production we’ve come to expect from Blake. That’s not to say there’s anything predictable or ordinary about the album – if anything, there are so many sonic curve-balls and WTFs throughout these tracks that it begs the question of how do you top this the next time around? Anyway, one thing’s for sure and it’s that Blake’s musical pallet is a fair bit brighter of late and you can expect a deeper, stronger and more solid vocal tone on much of the album. There’s also a noticeably heavier leaning towards hip hop and R&B production than previously, with the end result being a perfect blend of avant-garde ambience and bass-heavy, head-nodding beats. It’s a super classy effort.

![106023](http://dis.resized.images.s3.amazonaws.com/540x310/106023.jpeg)

Fri Jan 25 13:45:53 GMT 2019

Tiny Mix Tapes 70

James Blake
Assume Form

[Polydor; 2019]

Rating: 3.5/5

“Doesn’t it get much clearer?”
A love affair leaps and melts, clinging like licks on lips, and then curt like closed mouths. Its genesis is obliteration. Its absence, whether liberating or apocalyptic, still transforms us. Its history is written in the artifacts its apostles leave behind.

“Doesn’t it seem connected?”
If you could hold it in your hands, would you keep it? Where would be safe enough? A locked drawer in a living room desk? A shed in the corner of your parents’ yard in Jersey? Would you bury it in the ground?

The trick is that you can’t hold it in your hands, can’t raise it up to your eyes and scrutinize it rationally, reasonably. All you have is hot choler and kisses, moments of oversaturated sensations. It’s hard to nail down. Why would you want to nail it down? How dare you assume form.

“Doesn’t it get you started?”
Assume Form, the fourth album from James Blake, cradles it in baubles and coos, honeys and hums. The love affair is the hearth that forms the center. Relation to another informs every inch of falsetto, every air’s intake and proclamation of devotion. It even starts with a thesis: “I will assume form/ I’ll leave the ether.”

The ether will always be there, and we’ll always be in it, and Assume Form promises formation and corporeality in spite/light of it. Even amid the title track’s spinning clicks of samples and disembodied piano lines, this is James Blake’s art of location and echoes attached to attachment: “I hope this is the first day/ That I connect motion to feeling.” Between location and our relation to it is whether we feel settled or restless. Blake sees the shadow inherent in the waiting and the wanting (“It feels like a thousand pounds of weight holding your body down in a pool of water, barely reaching your chin”) and also the irises of his beloved and commits to singing joy. It’s frequently exhilarating. At its end, it renders the fat of want as hot fire, not for combustion but for simple warmth; a thigh’s rest on a thigh, the smooth scrape of a fingerprint across a cheek. In the sweet rock of “Lullaby For My Insomniac,” you swear you could chew it and form yourself anew in its glow. If you told me it was Blake’s most stunning composition, would I dare arguing you?

“Doesn’t it make you happier?”
Between “Assume Form” and “Lullaby For My Insomniac” is the arc itself, the doubling and redoubling down on a mode of production that sets Assume Form apart from its predecessors, not always in a good way. “Mile High” and “Tell Them” are songs Blake might have produced for a collaborator (Travis Scott and Moses Sumney, maybe). They’re joyful and catchy. I hum “Tell Them” when I walk my dog in the snow and Metro Boomin’s leery traps ease into something a body would lob against leaving the bedcovers: “Heart, tell ‘em what you came for.” It’s catching but it’s distracted, or at least purposefully buried in conjuring accessibility. “Barefoot in the Park” is more conversation heart, chalky and sweet. It melds Rosalía’s just-so alto and Blake’s always, always affecting croon and sometimes I don’t notice where it ends and “Can’t Believe the Way We Flow” starts. Assume Form, at its center, feels like genre gloop spread over toast: good but too-easily digested. Sometimes it cloys. Sometimes it gets you through the day.

“Doesn’t it feel more natural?”
Suffering is no excuse for artistry, just as joy is not exempt from motivating Great Art. And why do you want Great Art? Sometimes it’s enough to hum it in snow squalls, to bop to it waving at other traffic-bound cars on the BQE. Like André says: “Hey, alright, now this may be a little bit heady/ And, y’know, I hate heady-ass verses,” like Blake says: “I’ll be out of my head this time.” But Blake’s art has always thrived on dislocation, on bridging tension and consonance. It was there in the glitch of the early EPs and the chittering self-titled swerves and the annihilated tangles of Overgrown and the expansive expressionism of The Colour in Anything. It sometimes gets abandoned on Assume Form, which, to its detriment, sometimes assumes cohesion as an end to form, rather than tension as a pathway to feeling.

Because Assume Form follows the one-off release, “If the Car Beside You Moves Ahead.” That song, a paranoiac slab of manipulated voice and doubting re-starts didn’t investigate a joy’s origin so much as it converted despair into a setting for transformation. It raised hackles (“If the car beside you moves ahead”) and stared down the ether (“As much as it feels as though you’re dead”), and it begged the voices to realize, trans-form, that they would survive: “You’re not going backwards.” If you told me it was Blake’s most stunning composition, would I dare arguing you?

“Doesn’t it seem much warmer just knowing the sun will be out?”
How dare we assume form, every day. If we could know it, would we be believe it? Form dictates that James Blake is either the barely-soul piano ballad or the future-noise post-dub chopping. But the trick is we can’t hold that in our hands without reducing the sublime to something low and clickable. How dare we let form impede the observations of a radio voice reporting our surfaces back to us. Assume Form drifts into heady consonance sometimes, yes, too easily discards dissonance, yes, but as soon as you say that, you remember the dark bats of doubt haunting the corners of “Are You in Love?” And before settling near the warmth of want on the record’s final track, “I Could Miss It”: I could avoid real-time and I could ignore my busy mind and I could avoid contact with eyes and I could avoid going outside and I could avoid wasting my life and I could avoid and I could avoid 20/20 sight and I could avoid standing in line and I could avoid the 405 and I could avoid coming to life and I could say anything I like and I could switch off whenever I like and I could sleep whenever I like and I could leave in the middle of the night.

“But I’d miss it.” The form and the words are James Blake, but the feelings are mine, what I wake up to and bid adieu to every morning and night. Assume form and don’t and discard it and don’t and, please, sing of love affairs. We’re not going backwards.

Mon Feb 04 05:05:45 GMT 2019

Tiny Mix Tapes 70

James Blake
Assume Form

[Polydor; 2019]

Rating: 3.5/5

“Doesn’t it get much clearer?”
A love affair leaps and melts, clinging like licks on lips, and then curt like closed mouths. Its genesis is obliteration. Its absence, whether liberating or apocalyptic, still transforms us. Its history is written in the artifacts its apostles leave behind.

“Doesn’t it seem connected?”
If you could hold it in your hands, would you keep it? Where would be safe enough? A locked drawer in a living room desk? A shed in the corner of your parents’ yard in Jersey? Would you bury it in the ground?

The trick is that you can’t hold it in your hands, can’t raise it up to your eyes and scrutinize it rationally, reasonably. All you have is hot choler and kisses, moments of oversaturated sensations. It’s hard to nail down. Why would you want to nail it down? How dare you assume form.

“Doesn’t it get you started?”
Assume Form, the fourth album from James Blake, cradles it in baubles and coos, honeys and hums. The love affair is the hearth that forms the center. Relation to another informs every inch of falsetto, every air’s intake and proclamation of devotion. It even starts with a thesis: “I will assume form/ I’ll leave the ether.”

The ether will always be there, and we’ll always be in it, and Assume Form promises formation and corporeality in spite/light of it. Even amid the title track’s spinning clicks of samples and disembodied piano lines, this is James Blake’s art of location and echoes attached to attachment: “I hope this is the first day/ That I connect motion to feeling.” Between location and our relation to it is whether we feel settled or restless. Blake sees the shadow inherent in the waiting and the wanting (“It feels like a thousand pounds of weight holding your body down in a pool of water, barely reaching your chin”) and also the irises of his beloved and commits to singing joy. It’s frequently exhilarating. At its end, it renders the fat of want as hot fire, not for combustion but for simple warmth; a thigh’s rest on a thigh, the smooth scrape of a fingerprint across a cheek. In the sweet rock of “Lullaby For My Insomniac,” you swear you could chew it and form yourself anew in its glow. If you told me it was Blake’s most stunning composition, would I dare arguing you?

“Doesn’t it make you happier?”
Between “Assume Form” and “Lullaby For My Insomniac” is the arc itself, the doubling and redoubling down on a mode of production that sets Assume Form apart from its predecessors, not always in a good way. “Mile High” and “Tell Them” are songs Blake might have produced for a collaborator (Travis Scott and Moses Sumney, maybe). They’re joyful and catchy. I hum “Tell Them” when I walk my dog in the snow and Metro Boomin’s leery traps ease into something a body would lob against leaving the bedcovers: “Heart, tell ‘em what you came for.” It’s catching but it’s distracted, or at least purposefully buried in conjuring accessibility. “Barefoot in the Park” is more conversation heart, chalky and sweet. It melds Rosalía’s just-so alto and Blake’s always, always affecting croon and sometimes I don’t notice where it ends and “Can’t Believe the Way We Flow” starts. Assume Form, at its center, feels like genre gloop spread over toast: good but too-easily digested. Sometimes it cloys. Sometimes it gets you through the day.

“Doesn’t it feel more natural?”
Suffering is no excuse for artistry, just as joy is not exempt from motivating Great Art. And why do you want Great Art? Sometimes it’s enough to hum it in snow squalls, to bop to it waving at other traffic-bound cars on the BQE. Like André says: “Hey, alright, now this may be a little bit heady/ And, y’know, I hate heady-ass verses,” like Blake says: “I’ll be out of my head this time.” But Blake’s art has always thrived on dislocation, on bridging tension and consonance. It was there in the glitch of the early EPs and the chittering self-titled swerves and the annihilated tangles of Overgrown and the expansive expressionism of The Colour in Anything. It sometimes gets abandoned on Assume Form, which, to its detriment, sometimes assumes cohesion as an end to form, rather than tension as a pathway to feeling.

Because Assume Form follows the one-off release, “If the Car Beside You Moves Ahead.” That song, a paranoiac slab of manipulated voice and doubting re-starts didn’t investigate a joy’s origin so much as it converted despair into a setting for transformation. It raised hackles (“If the car beside you moves ahead”) and stared down the ether (“As much as it feels as though you’re dead”), and it begged the voices to realize, trans-form, that they would survive: “You’re not going backwards.” If you told me it was Blake’s most stunning composition, would I dare arguing you?

“Doesn’t it seem much warmer just knowing the sun will be out?”
How dare we assume form, every day. If we could know it, would we be believe it? Form dictates that James Blake is either the barely-soul piano ballad or the future-noise post-dub chopping. But the trick is we can’t hold that in our hands without reducing the sublime to something low and clickable. How dare we let form impede the observations of a radio voice reporting our surfaces back to us. Assume Form drifts into heady consonance sometimes, yes, too easily discards dissonance, yes, but as soon as you say that, you remember the dark bats of doubt haunting the corners of “Are You in Love?” And before settling near the warmth of want on the record’s final track, “I Could Miss It”: I could avoid real-time and I could ignore my busy mind and I could avoid contact with eyes and I could avoid going outside and I could avoid wasting my life and I could avoid and I could avoid 20/20 sight and I could avoid standing in line and I could avoid the 405 and I could avoid coming to life and I could say anything I like and I could switch off whenever I like and I could sleep whenever I like and I could leave in the middle of the night.

“But I’d miss it.” The form and the words are James Blake, but the feelings are mine, what I wake up to and bid adieu to every morning and night. Assume form and don’t and discard it and don’t and, please, sing of love affairs. We’re not going backwards.

Mon Feb 04 05:05:45 GMT 2019

The Guardian 60

A love letter to his partner brimming with guest spots and west-coast vibes, James Blake’s fourth LP is a long way from his ‘blubstep’ roots

It’s not hard to see why someone might fall in love with Jameela Jamil – the star around which James Blake’s fourth album, Assume Form, orbits. The character Jamil plays on NBC’s The Good Place gets called things like “sexy skyscraper” (and “sexy giraffe”, and “a hot rich fraud with legs for days”).

Jamil’s penthouse suite is well furnished too. The British radio DJ turned screenwriter turned actor recently made a documentary for Radio 4 about sexual consent. Her Instagram campaign #iweigh encourages women to consider their true substance: their strengths and achievements, rather than their vital statistics. Last year she called the Kardashians “unwitting double-agents for the patriarchy”.

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Sat Jan 19 14:00:17 GMT 2019

Pitchfork 58

There’s a suffocating seriousness that runs through the singer and producer’s fourth album, one that bogs down genuine moments of levity and love.

Tue Jan 22 06:00:00 GMT 2019

The Guardian 0

Blake is clearly in a good place, unexpectedly embedded at the centre of pop culture, and his new album adds bright colours to his sound

It feels strange now to recall a time when James Blake’s elevation from underground post-dubstep auteur to hotly-tipped mainstream artist seemed like the result of a clerical error. It was hard not to be impressed by his eponymous 2011 debut album, but it was equally hard not to wonder whether this really was the stuff of which silver medals in the BBC Sound of … poll and spots on the Radio 1 A-list were made. If you listened to its sparse, abstract, deeply uncommercial assemblages of treated vocals, electronics and piano, there was something very odd indeed about his name being mentioned in the same breath as Jessie J.

Related: James Blake speaks out about struggle with depression

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Thu Jan 17 12:00:16 GMT 2019