AALIYAH, Aaliyah
unpublished* review, Village Voice, August 2001
by Simon Reynolds
I was going to call myself an Aaliyah fan--after all, she's made two of my
all
time favorite singles, "One In A Million" and "Are You That
Somebody?"--but somehow the idea of an "Aaliyah fan" seems faintly
absurd. There's dozens of websites devoted to the singer whose name is
Swahili for "most exalted one", but beyond her obvious beauty and vocal
skill, what are these folk latching onto? The sites are uniformly thin
on biographical content or back story. Of all the premier league
R&B goddesses, Aaliyah seems the most blank: she doesn't even
have a persona as such, let alone exhibit actual this-is-me
personality. This is a young woman who's been involved in the music
industry for most of her 22 years, working her way up the rungs from the
age of nine. In a recent Billboard interview, droning fluent
bizspeak about the importance of "versatility" and the need to pace your
career, unfurling cliches about creative "chemistry" and thriving on
"pressure", Aaliyah comes over as a dour professional and a workaholic
strategist who's cannily diversified into movies like Romeo Must Die and Queen of the Damned.
More than just impersonal, there's something almost immaterial about Aaliyah
(it's
hard to imagine her flossing her teeth, or wiping her bottom). Aaliyah
might be best understood, and enjoyed, then as a figment--a phantom of
cathode-ray dazzle and studio-processed breath--concocted by an ensemble
of stylists, choreographers, make-up artists, personal trainers,
lighting technicians, video directors, song-doctors (like her main
writer, Static from Playa), and, not least, trackmasters like Timbaland,
her primary production foil until now. Timbaland has said he uses
Aaliyah as "a probe" (itself an oddly depersonalized phrase), a vehicle
for testing his most far-out ideas in the "urban" marketplace. That
metaphor fits "One In A Million", the 1996 smash whose stutterfunk kick
drums created the rhythmic template for the last five years of
R&B and rap, and it works for 1998's "Are You That Somebody?", which
took the stop-start groove thing to the brink of rhythmic arrest. But
the sole novelty of last year's "Try Again," its acid-house Roland 303
bassline, was fresh only in context (urban radio), while this year's "We
Need A Resolution" continues the decline in daring, showcasing no new
moves whatsoever. Everything in the song is decidedly deja for
Tim-watchers, from the snake-charmer flute motifs ("Big Pimpin'") and
tabla-like percussion ("Get UR Freak On") to the sinister slither of the
reversed-sounding techno riffs ("Snoopy Trak," off Jay-Z's Vol. 3).
With his two other cuts on Aaliyah's new album being the catchy but
unstartling "More Than A Woman" and "I Care 4 U", a five year old,
Missy-penned out-take from the One In A Million album sessions, there's a
suspicion that Timbaland shot his wad on So Addictive and is all innovated out for the time being.
The other producers involved in Aaliyah--Keybeats,
Inc (a/k/a Rapture & E-Seats), Bud' Da, and J-Dub a/k/a
Rockstar-- aren't probing any outer limits either. The result is an
album that is unspectacular, but very listenable. From the ungainly
title/chorus down, "We Need A Resolution" wasn't exactly singular as a
single, but its midtempo understatedness works just fine as an album
opener. The same applies to most everything here: Aaliyah's all
album tracks and no obvious hits, but it's expertly paced and
programmed, the whole stronger than any individual part. Make it past
the first, underwhelmed listen and its cumulative seductiveness kicks
in.
Rapture & E-Seats's stand-out "Rock The
Boat" is all diffuse sensuality and shimmering sleekness. The song's
"adult" lyrics--"stroke it for me/work it to the middle/change
positions"--are something of a maturity move for Aaliyah, and not wholly
convincing. She doesn't really do "hot", it doesn't suit her gritless
voice, at times so snowy-textured and sparing with the melisma that it's
almost white. Showing more skin than usual, draped in snakes and caked
in vampy make-up, she looked uncomfortable in the "Resolution" video,
and you can't really imagine
her mucking in with the harlots of
"Lady Marmalade". Until now, her two primary modes have been
near-virginal devotion ("One in a Million", "4 Page Letter") and
tension, a yearning-but-holding-back wariness of love. Both "Are You
That Somebody" and "Try Again" are premised on the idea of Aaliyah as
hard-to-get, while "Resolution" is all about people not getting (it)
on.
Outside these two modes, Aaliyah doesn't fare so well. The twittery-vocaled
anti-wife
abuse schlock of "Never No More" is a calculated display of
versatility, announcing "I can deal with heavy topics". "U Got Nerve" is
a weak stab at Beyonce-style toughness, and "I Refuse", from its
I-am-woman-hear-me-roar defiance to the baroque'n'roll bombast of J.
Dub's arrangement, is a "Bills Bills Bills" knock-off two years tardy.
Mind you, this Austro-Hungarian Rhapsody might be the album's most
authentic Aaliyah moment, given that her all-time favorite band is
apparently Queen!
On two songs, you get a glimpse of
Aaliyah as a potential auteur, rather than just a key component of hit
records, the brand name front for a collective of expert technicians.
Bud'Da's "I Can Be" is Aaliyah at her most frosty, shrouded in a skein
of glassy guitarscree that seems to belong more on a Banshees or
Cocteaus album. And the J.Dub-prod. "What If," daubed in garish
metal-funk guitar, even sees Aaliyah rock out with a modicum of sass.
The song's sheer overwraughtness feels cathartic after so much
mature'n'demure restraint.
Hints, if not of darkness
or deepness, of at least an aspiration in that direction: Aaliyah as ice
queen of Gothic R&B! "I Can Be" especially is a glimpse of the
more audacious album Aaliyah could have been, if, for instance, the singer had
done
a collaboration with Trent Reznor as she once improbably contemplated
with apparently genuine enthusiasm ("I think he's a genius!", she
gushed). For the time being, though, Aaliyah is a fine third album. And Aaliyah remains a exquisite cipher.
*
unpublished: this had to be pulled at the minute having been written
and edited and ready-to-roll but then Aaliyah died in that awful plane
crash.
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