City Times

Album Review: Heartbreak weather

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Fine Line,”

An anxious Horan appears on the cover of his sophomore solo album. He’s standing on a chair in the middle of a street with a nasty-looking thundersto­rm brewing behind him. It’s a fittingly awkward image for what turns out is an awkward album.

Heartbreak Weather is an overall bright collection from the former One Directione­r, but one that doesn’t top his 2017 debut, the nifty Flicker. If he was more folky on the last one, here he’s veered back into pop, making 14 perfectly fine tracks, if not volcanic ones.

The half dozen best songs — like the Ed Sheeran-like No Judgement, the ‘80s-ish title track and the addictive New Angel — are diluted by too many that make little impression, especially the softer, quieter songs Black and White, Dear Patience, Put a Little Love On Me, Still and San Francisco.

The sultry, rocking Nice to Meet Ya was a dynamite first single, but its cocky Brit-pop sound isn’t followed through for the rest of

Heartbreak Weather. Horan’s music doesn’t always reach out and grab you by the throat, so a few listens are often required to release their understate­d beauty. But more spins don’t always help this time.

Horan has once again written on every track and tapped some top producers for an album in which every song is about a lover or a former one. Horan really only has two speeds on Heartbreak Weather — frisky or brokenhear­ted. “Let’s skip all the small talk and go straight up to your room,” he sings in one song. On another he’s down and haunted: “I try to run, but you’re everywhere I go.”

Heartbreak Weather is in no way a disaster like the one approachin­g Horan on the album cover. It’s just not an improvemen­t on his debut effort. Not to worry, the storm will pass. Also, pro tip: Avoid wearing white pants in a squall.

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