Showing posts with label Michael Kiwanuka. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Michael Kiwanuka. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 18, 2021

Michael Kiwanuka - Love & Hate

Styles: Adult Contemporary 
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:08
Size: 126,7 MB
Art: Front

(10:10)  1. Cold Little Heart
( 4:19)  2. Black Man In A White World
( 4:16)  3. Falling
( 4:47)  4. Place I Belong
( 7:07)  5. Love & Hate
( 3:53)  6. One More Night
( 2:46)  7. I'll Never Love
( 5:42)  8. Rule The World
( 7:05)  9. Father's Child
( 4:59) 10. The Final Frame

On his ambitious sophomore set, London native Michael Kiwanuka expands outward from the warm retro-soul of 2012 debut, Home Again. With its trio of producers and transatlantic recording locales, Love & Hate arrives with the weight of high expectations. Announcing his intentions from the start, Kiwanuka challenges listeners with "Cold Little Heart," an exquisitely arranged, ten-minute opus of lush strings and elegant backing vocals whose first line doesn't arrive until the halfway point. It's a Homeric bit of heartbroken prog-soul that shows off its creator's lead guitar chops as much as his rich, sandy voice.

Co-produced by Danger Mouse and Inflo, it also introduces the heavy tonal palette that runs through the remainder of the album's ten tracks, even those produced by Kiwanuka's longtime collaborator, Paul Butler. Where Home Again was ultimately an intimate and gentler affair, Love & Hate puts some distance between singer and audience as he offers his worldweary introspections against the framework of '70s R&B, funk, and spaced-out rock. The timely social commentary of lead single "Black Man in a White World" feels lonesome and heavy in spite of its uptempo, hand-clapped rhythm and nimble guitar groove. Throughout the album, the space between parts is somehow wider, yet each tambourine hit, backing vocal, or funky guitar lick feels darker and more severe. The mildly psychedelic title cut is a mid-album standout whose slow-burning swagger and epic seven-minute length is countered by the tight, punchy "One More Night." Overall, Love & Hate has very little of the breezy, quietly strummed charm of its predecessor, but it represents serious growth from an artist deliberately pushing his boundaries. With this release, Kiwanuka has delivered a dark, graceful, and affecting artistic statement that is worth the patience it takes to experience it. ~ Timothy Monger http://www.allmusic.com/album/love-hate-mw0002934664

Love & Hate

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Michael Kiwanuka - Home Again

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 42:35
Size: 97.5 MB
Styles: Adult alternative, Contemporary Singer/Songwriter
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:07] 1. Tell Me A Tale
[2:20] 2. I'm Getting Ready
[3:25] 3. I'll Get Along
[3:49] 4. Rest
[3:29] 5. Home Again
[3:45] 6. Bones
[4:29] 7. Always Waiting
[4:00] 8. I Won't Lie
[3:37] 9. Any Day Will Do Fine
[4:55] 10. Worry Walks Beside Me
[4:35] 11. Lasan

After several promising EPs, Home Again officially announces Michael Kiwanuka as one of the most exciting talents around, one with a penchant for soulful folk and Afrobeat that has more in common with Marvin Gaye and Shuggie Otis than anyone from his own generation. On opener "Tell Me a Tale," for instance, Kiwanuka unleashes his tenderly gritty vocals over a decidedly lo-fi beat, nearly feeling lost in time before a set of Afrobeat horns kick in, and the result feels strangely modern rather than a mere throwback. Similarly, a song like "I'll Get Along," with its Mayfield-style woodwinds, should evoke hollow nostalgia, but Kiwanuka's charisma and sincerity somehow make it work in 2012: this is a man singing in the way he loves to sing, with lyrics he truly means, and the results often remind you why you fell in love with music in the first place.

Home Again