This week sees the release of Blake’s fifth studio album, Friends That Break Your Heart. Whether it’s JAY-Z or JPEGMAFIA, James Blake has been right in the middle of it all. In addition to his own work, Blake has proven himself to be a genius collaborator with credits on some of the 21st century’s defining records including Beyoncé’s Lemonade, Kendrick Lamar's Damn, and Frank Ocean’s Blonde. It was a revelatory move that he built on with subsequent albums Overgrown, The Color In Anything, and 2019’s Assume Form. A year later that same electronic innovator shocked the world by revealing himself to be a traditionalist releasing an intimate self-titled debut album featuring sparse piano in place of beats and his vocals entirely untreated. But those not ready to immerse themselves in the sea of melancholy will not particularly enjoy Blake’s 5th LP.In 2010, when genre terms like “post-dubstep” were bandied around freely, James Blake established himself as an innovative producer with a love of jazz chords and a tendency to mask his own vocals with chopped up ‘90s R&B samples. James Blake’s loyal fans who, after his 10-year career, understand the artist’s emotionality are guaranteed to find comfort and shelter in the subdued sounds filled with profound sadness and grief. However, Friends That Break Your Heart will not change Blake’s liminal position in the industry since those unconvinced by, for instance, Assume Form, will not discover anything new or surprising on this record. He has already left the niche, but remains somewhere in the middle ground, not quite attracting the same large audiences that his collaborators do. The lyrics of “Say What You Will” reveal the artist’s struggle with accepting that his music has never truly entered the mainstream. Both “Frozen” and “Funeral” are proof that Blake’s collaborative projects with rappers are what he does best. The bonus track, released a few days after the album’s premiere, a rework of “Funeral” with slowthai, proves even more heartrending with the addition of the British rapper’s gritty voice. Blake’s vocals feel as if they were coming from a distant place, adding a complex spatiality to the track. While Blake’s foray into poppier tunes might not be the most successful part of Friends That Break Your Heart, “Frozen”, a collaboration with rappers JID and SwaVay, stands out as one of the most interesting and genre-bending tracks on the album. For some, this album may seem the most coherent from his body of work, but personally, I miss the apparent disharmony and discontinuity from the artist’s debut album or Overgrown.Īn epic journey: Little Simz album review His new album still delivers its listeners a mixture of electronics and instrumentals but departs almost completely from his purely electronic roots. Most of them have a surprisingly conventional structure that is in most cases coherent and well-thought-out, but which feels a bit too safe for Blake’s music. And this moment of disjointedness is what the ballads on this album, such as the eponymous “Friends That Break Your Heart” or “Lost Angel Nights” are missing. Although still heartrending, they did not try to jerk tears, as often happens with many pop ballads. This discontinuous structure, for me, resulted in the rejection of pathos in Blake’s ballads about unreciprocated love and heartbreak. The ballads from his previous albums consistently contain an element of surprise – a jarring beat, or a sudden change of pace. To me, James Blake has always deconstructed the form of a sentimental ballad. which feels a bit too safe for Blake’s music” have a surprisingly conventional structure. In this way, Blake conceptualises stories of his lost friendships as love stories that have the power to break our heart even more than those of our lost lovers: “And as many loves that have crossed my path/In the end, it was friends.It was friends who broke my heart.” Without knowing the title of the album, almost every song on Friends That Break Your Heart could be read as an expression of the sorrow of a longing lover coming to terms with a breakdown of a relationship. James Blake’s fifth LP reminds us of the value of friendship and that certain friendships can also be called love. After all, stars also had to align for us to feel a connection with them at a particular moment in our life. But when thinking about our closest friends, we so often forget the amount of luck that goes into meeting a person we later become best friends with. Whenever we talk about falling in love, we tend to highlight the beauty of finding that one special person among almost 8 billion people on the planet.
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