Ottawa Citizen

ALBUM REVIEWS

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Eminem Revival Interscope

The A-list collaborat­ors on Eminem’s new album scream “I want a radio hit.” They include appearance­s by Beyoncé, Ed Sheeran, Pink and Alicia Keys.

It wouldn’t be hard to believe, especially since Eminem’s last major hits have relied heavily on Rihanna, from Love the Way You Lie to The Monster. But thankfully on Revival, Eminem returns as the star of his show.

Beyoncé sounds beautiful on opener Walk On Water, but Em’s words are even better, as he delivers honest lyrics that sound, and feel, true to him.

“Every album song I was spazzin’ the f--- out on/And now I’m gettin’ clowned and frowned on,” he raps.

Eminem is no longer hip hop’s most prized wordsmith and the adjustment is tough for any performer once known as one of music’s most celebrated acts.

But on Revival, his ninth studio album, Eminem makes himself relevant with his smart rhymes. The album artwork is of the American flag, with race and U.S. President Donald Trump recurring topics throughout the 19 tracks.

N.E.R.D. No-One Ever Really Dies Columbia

Carve out some time and be prepared to put in some work. N.E.R.D. albums are not background dinner music, folks.

The 11-track No-One Ever Really Dies by the trio — Pharrell Williams, Chad Hugo and Shay Haley — is equal parts experiment­al, intriguing, frustratin­g and captivatin­g. In other words, very true to its side-project DNA.

Many of the songs don’t seem quite finished and some are completely overcooked, and many of the lyrics are wacky.

But there’s also great richness here, sometimes hiding in the layered swaths of upbeat computer synth, distorted sounds, endless repetition and random electronic shards.

As a testament to Williams’ stature, he has attracted Rihanna, Gucci Mane, Kendrick Lamar, Future, M.I.A., Andre 3000 and Ed Sheeran to make appearance­s, while A$AP Rocky and Mary J. Blige offer backing vocals on Kites.

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