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Luckily for her, Adele did take note of her own flaws. She knew that she had to improve, to age up, and she intended to do so. 21 is a logical title for a follow-up, and both the albums name and cover create a very deliberate contrast to 19, to show that Adele has indeed grown. From the moment lead single Rolling in the Deep was released last year, solely in the Netherlands thus far, it became an instant hit. Since the country was her biggest breakthrough outside of her own, it was a logical strategy to promote her second album there sooner. The tune is catchy, but also darker and more soulful: Adele did not take the easy road by duplicating her first album, and prospects were good.
Singles can be deceiving, but 21 does deliver. Adele has yet to find a style that is completely her own, but she is well on her way. In the writing department, shes had a bit more help this time around: along with her previous collaborator Eg White, popular Brit producer Paul Epworth (Florence & The Machine, Bloc Party) and OneRepublic figure Ryan Tedder, among others, have kindly lent a hand, whilst the majority of the songs are produced by long-time Red Hot Chili Peppers-collaborator Rick Rubin. With so many people around it, Adeles second is a far more produced affair than 19; yet another contrast to the majority of acoustic, sparsely arranged songs that made up the latter.
The industry is all too interested in keeping Adele relevant, which is not to say that is always a bad thing. In this case, it isnt. 21 is an obvious foray into soul, a style that Adele employed from the beginning, but now goes into much deeper. She handles her voice capably on deliberately old-school-sounding tunes as Take it All and One and Only, perfectly masks the fact that Lovesong is a Cure cover, but doesnt always explore the territories that she best fits: the chorus of Rumour Has It just isnt made for the girl. The album however is consistent: with this level of production and co-writing, it is easy to suspect an overly commercialized scenario, and although the target audience is obvious, this is a very decent collection of pop songs. The next single candidates are fairly predictable. The easily accessible piano ballads Turning Tables and Someone Like You, as well as the string-dominant, huge-chorused Set Fire to the Rain will no doubt make radio airplay in the coming months. And in the way this is supposed to go for pop records, they are also the best moments here.
21 is an improvement over 19, and what makes it that is not only the fact the Adele seems to be growing as a both a singer and a songwriter, but also that it isnt as disjointed as its predecessor. Adeles former record hopped between acoustic ballads and huge songs that her voice couldnt quite tackle yet. Her follow-up shows maturation, consistency, and once again ensures her position in mainstream pop music. The public will eat it up, yes, but she isnt undeserving of it.
Genre : Pop/Rock
Type : CD
Track Listing: