Track in M.I.A.'s new album: 'kind of lullaby one would sing to a baby android' - Wall Street Jo...
Amid all the sonic commotion, M.I.A. pauses from time to time to show a softer side
By Christopher John Farley
Like Courtney Love, Sinead OâConnor and Lady Gaga, M.I.A. makes music that revels in contradiction and controversy. M.I.A., a.k.a. Mathangi Arulpragasam, this week released her third album, whose title is a stylized rendering of her nickname, âMaya.â
The album comes in the wake of a recent New York Times magazine profile that portrayed the British-born, Sri Lankan artist as something of a phony, preaching revolution while eating truffle-flavored French fries. M.I.A. condemned the article on Twitter and said her words and actions had been twisted; the New York Times magazine subsequently appended an Editorsâ Note to the story.
So after all the talk, how is M.I.A.âs new album? âMayaâ is a determinedly varied affair, ranging from noise-rock songs like âBorn Freeâ to reggae-ish pop confections such as âIt Takes a Muscle.â M.I.A. employs a range of vocal attacks, rapping, chanting, singing, talkingâwhatever she can do to deliver her lyrics.
Whatâs most interesting about the album is the rhythmic invention it displays. Songs like âXXXOâ donât fall into neat genres, and draw readily from hip-hop, techno, pop and other sources. Many pop artists, when theyâre trying to be creative, focus on melodies or lyrics. M.I.A., with collaborating producers such as Switch and Rusko, turns her attention to the foundation of her compositions, breaking them apart, like a hardhat busting concrete, and building something new on the ruins.
âMeds and Fedsâ is a tangle of guitars and chanting repeated until the listener capitulates, and gives in to the beat. Other songs on the album, like âTell Me Why,â also get by more on ferocity than melody. But amid all the sonic commotion, M.I.A. pauses from time to time to show a softer side. The track âSpaceâ comes across as the kind of lullaby one would sing to a baby android. [courtesy: Wall Street Journal - Speak Easy]