BHASA INGGRIS (IMPERSONAL IT AND THERE) TUGAS 2
Let’s get the good news out first: Dua Lipa’s new
album is, by any stretch of the drqeaded phrase, not a sophomore slump. Far
from it, it’s a cool, compact and breezy listen from start to finish, an
item of note in itself compared to her effective and promising yet eventually
overstuffed 2017 debut (its Complete Edition contains a whopping 25 tracks).The
bad news? Despite its hefty title and obvious quality control, there’s little
reward from cursory and repeated listening. Although clearly devised as an attempt
to establish her stranglehold in the upper echelons of pop stardom,Future Nostalgia is,
for all intents and purposes, merely a step above your average New Music Friday
tunes on Spotify.From
Lipa’s perspective, this is understandable. Following a double win at last
year’s Grammy Awards, including Best New Artist (the first year with eight
nominees in the category to boot), there must have been immense pressure to
build on the foundation of this type of recognition and follow up on the
mainstream momentum started by the British-Albanian songstress’ omnipresent
“New Rules”.It’s
telling that Future Nostalgia’s
lead single, “Don’t Start Now”, was cowritten by Lipa with the same group of
people who wrote “New Rules”. It serves as something of a sequel, even if only
in spirit. In place of a trop-pop concoction with the inevitable beat drop in
the chorus, “Don’t Start Now” is a sleek and slinky — if a ta1d tepid —
kiss-off anthem transported straight from the 1970s, in all its discofied,
roller rink-tastic glory. It would have probably gone head-to-head in the
charts with Gloria Gaynor’s “I Will Survive” had it come out in 1978.However,
Lipa’s husky, smoky contralto is for the most part at odds with much of Future Nostalgia’s
precision-tooled breeziness. When paired with an apropos soundscape, Lipa’s
gritty and soulful vocals shine with flying colors: past single “IDGAF” — still
Lipa’s best song to date — brims with edge and attitude, while she imbues her
house-inflected Grammy-winning track “Electricity” with genuine warmth. She
sounds more at home covering Etta James than
Barbra Streisand anyway.At
certain points in Future Nostalgia,
Lipa sounds as if she’s trying to fit into the coy and coquettish (blond)
female pop star mold: although genially crafted, “Cool” and “Good In Bed” are
essentially rewrites of Taylor Swift’s “Cruel Summer” (just wait for a mash-up
called “Cool Summer” in the foreseeable future) and Carly Rae Jepsen’s
“Everything He Needs”. They
are just largely bereft of Swift or Jepsen’s engaging bombastic and playful
girlishness as Lipa’s voice isn’t necessarily a fit for this material.
When her voice is a natural fit, though, it is marred by subpar
songwriting: the chorus of new wave throwback and second single “Physical” —
which interpolates Olivia Newton-John’s 1981 hit of the same name — sags rather
than soars, killing all the momentum built up by the verses.These
are frustrating instances only because Lipa is among the most interesting
vocalists to have emerged in the better part of the last decade, with a clear
vision for her own brand of pop and keen understanding of the pop game.There’s
something refreshingly old-school about her approach as evidenced by the slow,
consistent build-up of “Don’t Start Now” via TV and radio appearances, not to
mention her insistence on creating albums instead of a steady stream of singles
and her deep appreciation for pop foremothers; four of the album’s 11 tracks
were helmed by Stuart Price, who coproduced Madonna’s 2005 dance opus Confessions on a
Dancefloor, an obvious influence on Future Nostalgia.Unfortunately,
thanks to pop’s innate requirement for its movers and shakers to conform rather
than command, what could have been a game-changer falls short of its maker’s
noble intentions, leaving the title track’s grandiose opening line (“You want a
timeless song/I wanna change the game”) ring somewhat hollow over the course of
the album.Nevertheless,
flashes of brilliance can still be found, particularly in the album’s
mid-point: “Levitating” is a slice of pure disco joy; “Pretty Please”
features juicy stabs of bass and cowbells over chopped up vocals; while
the album’s best track “Hallucinate” struts, grinds and sweats over throbbing
bass lines borrowed from Madonna’s “Impressive Instant” and Kylie
Minogue’s “Light Years”.It’s
in the album’s personal moments that we get a better glimpse of Lipa’s
personality and pizzazz, such as in “Love Again” with its clever sampling of
White Town’s 1997 hit “Your Woman” and “Boys Will Be Boys” (“...and girls will
be women”), a feminist manifesto that closes the album on a high note. Future Nostalgia could
have absolutely benefited from more statement-making excursions in this vein.Still,
in an otherwise precarious time in modern history, Future Nostalgia makes
for an apt soundtrack at isolation parties in the world. At best, it’s a prompt
reminder of the sheer vitality and necessity of music when the going gets
tough; at worst, despite their potential for ubiquity, there’s no playing these
songs out loud in clubs or gatherings for the time being.“I
would’ve stayed at home/‘Cause I was doing better alone,” intones Lipa cheekily
in the INXS-sampling and third single “Break My Heart”, an accidental
premonition of sorts.As Future Nostalgia’s
cover suggests, here’s hoping that Lipa is headed for a future release that
does her artistic chops justice and takes her sound to higher grounds. In the
meantime, Future Nostalgia is
here for us to jam and dance to — in the comfort of our homes. (wng)Fajar Zakhri is a pop music.https://www.thejakartapost.com/life/2020/03/31/dua-lipas-future-nostalgia-songs-for-the-end-of-the-world-as-we-know-it-and-its-fine.html
(IMPERSONAL IT AND THERE)
1. . Far from it, it’s a cool, compact and breezy listen from start to finish, an item of note in itself compared to her effective and promising yet eventually overstuffed 2017 debut (its Complete Edition contains a whopping 25 tracks.( paragraph 1, line 2)in this statement is impersonal it introduce identification.
2. It’s telling
that Future Nostalgia’s
lead single, “Don’t Start Now”, was cowritten by Lipa with the same group of
people who wrote “New Rules”.(paragraph 4,line 1) in this statement is impersonal it introduce
identification.
3.
There’s
something refreshingly old-school about her approach as evidenced by the slow,
consistent build-up of “Don’t Start Now” via TV and radio appearances, not to
mention her insistence on creating albums instead of a steady stream of singles
and her deep appreciation for pop foremothers; four of the album’s 11 tracks
were helmed by Stuart Price, who coproduced Madonna’s 2005 dance opus Confessions on a
Dancefloor, an obvious influence on Future Nostalgia.
(Paragraph 8, line 1) in this statement is the pattern of
introductory there.
(IMPERSONAL IT AND THERE)
1. . Far from it, it’s a cool, compact and breezy listen from start to finish, an item of note in itself compared to her effective and promising yet eventually overstuffed 2017 debut (its Complete Edition contains a whopping 25 tracks.( paragraph 1, line 2)in this statement is impersonal it introduce identification.
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