home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- REVIEWS, Page 70MUSICA Sweet yet Fiery Essence
-
-
- By GIL GRIFFIN
-
- PERFORMER: NENEH CHERRY
- ALBUM: Homebrew
- LABEL: Virgin
-
- THE BOTTOM LINE: The singer-rapper paints poignant,
- street-smart scenes of life, love and urban reality.
-
-
- One minute she is tender, singing with a lilt as soft and
- sweet as cotton candy. The next she drives her points home by
- rapping tart, in-your-face rhymes as pungent as picante salsa.
- Afro-British singer-songwriter Neneh Cherry, 27, exhibited this
- sweet yet fiery (and fervently feminist) demeanor on her
- memorable 1989 debut album, Raw Like Sushi. The alluring
- dichotomy continues on her sensational new release, Home brew.
- Call it the essence of being Neneh.
-
- The album, co-produced in first-rate fashion by Cherry with
- her husband Booga Bear and Johnny Dollar, kicks off with the
- appropriately titled Sassy, an old-school, freestyle rap tune,
- in which she asserts, "Fellas got to give me the most respect/
- 'Cause you know I don't waste my time." Propelled by a jazzy
- piano riff, she rhymes a duet with the Guru, a raspy male rapper
- from the group Gang Starr. "If you step to her wrong," he warns,
- "you're getting played like jazz."
-
- Many of the cuts, such as Move with Me, Twisted and Red
- Paint, show Cherry in a soul-searching mood, singing and
- rapping almost mystically ("Move with me, I'm strong enough/ To
- be weak in your arms"). The sparse, moody arrangements,
- combining synthesizer strings, record-turntable scratches and
- occasional guitar, bass and piano riffs, give her hip-hop, rock
- and jazz fusion a delightfully surreal ambience.
-
- But Cherry rocks out too. Money Love, the first single
- released from the album, flexes a kinetic, chunky drumbeat and
- power guitar riffs. Trout, which despite its ambiguous title is a
- hymn of praise for sex education in public schools, is set to
- a booming, get-up-out-of-your-seat hip-hop drum rhythm, with
- guitars and harmonica added for good measure. On this track
- Cherry does a snappy duet with R.E.M. lead singer Michael Stipe,
- who manages not to embarrass himself while rapping.
-
- Homebrew's hallmark track, though, is I Ain't Gone Under
- Yet, an eloquent portrait of a stereotype-defying young mother
- on the streets. The piece aims to make listeners rethink their
- assumptions about the homeless and single mothers. First Cherry
- raps, "The city's my home, the streets where I roam/ But still
- I leave the drugs and violence alone." Then she breaks out into
- smooth singing: "Your under is my over/ I've never seen your
- over yet/ But don't forget/ I ain't gone under yet."
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-