The National - News

SONGS WITH HEART

Ahead of the Grammy Awards, Saeed Saeed takes a look at how this year’s nominees have tackled the issue of mental health

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Modern popular music is moving away from sheer escapism. Increasing­ly we find a growing batch of both young and establishe­d acts tackling difficult topics, and arguably none is more relevant than mental health.

While the 60th Annual Grammy Awards ceremony on Sunday night (United States time) has already been hailed as a game changer due to the prevalence of hip-hop and R‘n’B acts in major award categories (down to an overhaul of the voting process to counter accusation­s of irrelevanc­e), the real revolution seems to have taken place within the nominated artists themselves.

Nearly all of the major awards up for grabs contain songs that are frank in their discussion of mental health, depression and anxiety.

While genres such as rock and folk share an affinity with murky subjects, the emergence of hip-hop as a platform to discuss matters of the heart and mind is influentia­l.

With the genre firmly establishe­d as the most dominating and its artists headlining nearly all the major European and North American music festivals, a rapper’s word is powerful. And perhaps none are more moving than Logic’s 1-800-273-8255.

Nominated for the prestigiou­s Song of the Year, and its title named after the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline in the United States, the track shifts perspectiv­es from a caller to the hotline to the advisor on the other end before concluding with a soulful outro provided by young R‘n’B star Khalid, who provides the refrain: “I wanna feel alive, I don’t even wanna die anymore.”

While sublime, Logic’s song is not a surprise if you have been following the work of the introspect­ive rapper. This is why fellow artist Jay-Z’s 4:44, another song nominated in the same category, hits you like a thunderbol­t.

For a rapper renowned for an icy cool demeanour, the evocative song – which is basically an apology letter to his wife, pop star Beyoncé – has him questionin­g his masculine ideals: “Like the men before me, I cut off my nose to spite my face, I never wanted another woman to know, Something about me that you didn’t know, I promised, I cried, I couldn’t hold, I suck at love, I think I need a do-over.”

One of rock‘n’roll’s hardest men Josh Homme also uncharacte­ristically showed some cracks on Villains, the latest album from Queens of the Stone Age. Nominated for Best Rock Album, it is the fourth song, the bruising rock ballad Fortress, that is the most revealing.

Addressing his three young children over spidery riffs, he advises them to not lock up difficult feelings and embrace the insights they often gift: “Every fortress falls, It is not the end, It ain’t if you fall but how you rise that says who you really are.”

On that score, expect some of the night’s biggest applause if Kesha wins any of the two awards she is nominated for.

Her fantastica­lly eclectic third album Rainbow, which is up for Best Pop Vocal Album, details her recovery from substance abuse and eating disorders amid one of the most acrimoniou­s legal battles in the music industry of recent years, when she sued her former mentor and producer Dr Luke for emotional and sexual abuse. He denied the claims and then countersue­d.

The album is full of raw and emotionall­y charged lyrics regarding healing and forgivenes­s (of others and self); those themes are best exemplifie­d in the gospel tack and album centre piece, Praying, which is up for Best Pop Solo Performanc­e: “I’m proud of who I am, No more monsters, I can breathe again.”

Not all the emotional lyrics prevalent in this year’s Grammy Awards nomination­s come from a personal experience, however.

Indeed, this is what makes Aimee Mann albums such a bewitching listen. In a laconic dig to critics who often describe her songs as sad, she went all in on her ninth release and created her starkest set of songs yet with the Best Folk Album nominee Mental Illness.

But Mann is simply too good a wordsmith and humanist to create songs wallowing in despair.

With characters ranging from an adrenaline junkie and a con artist to a faded celebrity, we identify with all their foibles because we also have

the capacity for self-destructiv­e behaviour: “Just a little bit of what I need, To soothe an appetite that I can’t feed, Isn’t that good for me?” she asks in the plaintive piano ballad Good For Me.

Sadly, the artist responsibl­e for some of rock’s most powerful lyrics regarding human frailty won’t be in attendance on Sunday. The suicide of Chris Cornell in May continues to reverberat­e in the tightly knit US rock community. The last solo release before his death, The Promise, is up for Best Rock Performanc­e.

It contains a heartrendi­ng plea for those on the margins: “No matter the price, Promise to survive, Persevere and thrive, As we’ve always done.”

No matter the price, Promise to survive, Persevere and thrive, As we’ve always done CHRIS CORNELL ‘The Promise’

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