 | Tamyra
Gray
The Dreamer
label: 19 Records
released: 05.25.04
our score: 4.0 out of 5.0 |
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Just
the Sum of Her Parts, But They're Great Parts
by:
matt
cibula | Tamyra
Gray got jobbed on Season One of “American Idol.”
You know it, I know it, everyone knows it: Kelly
Clarkson’s album was pretty good, but come on, America:
Justin Freakin’ Guarini? But anyway, it’s over now,
nothing to be done, move on, etc.
It’s
taken Tamyra two years and change, though, to come up with her
first album. This is because she wanted to do things right, by
her own code. She’s a songwriter, so she wrote (co-wrote)
all the songs, along with some writers and producers you’ve
never heard of. She’s wholesome, so there are no sexxx jammmz,
but she’s soulful, so she gets to wail out hard on some
cuts. Yet she’s still a pop professional, so there are also
moments of unbelievable commerce. A lot of sweat and hard work
and worry went into this record, and she’s banking on people
caring about that. (I think she’s overestimating America’s
capacity for empathy, but whatever.)
So I’m glad to report that the songs
are pretty good, overall, well-written and pretty and hooky. Gray
knows her strengths, and plays to them in songs like “Legend,”
where she knows that the 6/8-ish dusty storm rhythm will let her
slow-burn up to the chorus and then drop back into hush mode only
to build up again; it’s the whole quiet-loud thing, we know
it well, we love it, it’s workin’ for her.
Most
of the tunes here can be easily described as r&b pop, but
Gray doesn’t want to be pigeonholed, so some of the stuff
here is pretty surprising: “Faces” is a real old-fashioned
rock power ballad; if it sounds a bit like Jefferson Starship
doing Janet Jackson’s “Black Cat,” then at least
her strong lovely voice keeps things interesting: “You kick
me when I’m down / Trap me when I’m free / Cut me
with your lies / Stand back and watch me bleed”. (Yeah,
it’s a little corny, but it’s also awesome. Feel the
paradox.) There is a lot of techno trying to escape on “Like
a Child,” burbling synths gossiping across the speakers,
a harp sample, lovely really. And “Don’t Stop (Keep
It Coming)” is closer to Off the Wall than Thriller,
but that’s an awesome thing—the strings swell, the
funky groove is very 1970s-Quincy-Jones, and it’ll be lighting
up a lot of dancefloors this summer. It’s like she’s
channeling Rod Temperton!
That’s
the biggest problem here: Tamyra Gray doesn’t seem to be
much more at this point than the sum of her parts. The first song
aims at being a Stevie Wonder outtake (probably around the time
of Fulfillingness’ First Finale), and sinks that
battleship with ease. “You’ve Only Got 1” is
just exactly a Jill Scott Song, “Ha Ha” is Badu-istically
Delicious, and the big fat epic closer “God Bless the Dreamer”
might as well have walked out of the Diane Warren Hit Machine…except
with a little more soul than you’re gonna get with Diane
Warren. Gray is still doing the whole “American Idol”
thing: New song, new style, watch me adapt to it!
But this doesn’t mean it’s
bad. I’m all for musical diversity; hell, she nails it every
time, both vocally and lyrically, in a sweet unpretentious unchallenging
way that sounds great in your car. So what, really, if she’s
not bringing anything new to the table? It’s her first album,
and it sounds really pretty, and a few sappy lyrics or obvious
stylistic ripoffs aren’t going to spoil things for me. So
I am giving the big thumbs up here, with the warning that you
need a healthy tolerance level to get past some of the factory
popcraft.
10-Jun-2004
9:20 PM
 If you
liked The Dreamer... |
Tracklist:
1.
Star
2. The Only Thing
3. Legend
4. Raindrops Will Fall
5. Ha Ha
6. 17
7. Don't Stop (Keep it Coming)
8. U've Only Got 1
9. Faces
10. Like a Child
11. Yesterday/Today
12. Good Ol' Days
13. God Bless the Dreamer
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