UNCUT

JOAN As POLICE WOMAN Damned Devotion

Goth R&B and brutalist hymns on fine fifth outing from Joan Wasser. By Stephen TroussŽ

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Though she has been devoted to music since she was a conservato­ire kid, channellin­g the spirits of hendrix and Mahler through the unlikely medium of the five-string viola, it wasn’t until Joan Wasser was 36 that she released a record entirely of her own. 2006’s Real Life, her immaculate debut album, was abundantly worth the wait: a whole lifetime of love and trauma poured into songs so impeccably composed and performed (as if following Emily Dickinson’s observatio­n: “After great pain, a formal feeling comes”) they felt like standards. Since then it feels like she’s been making up for lost time.

“I say yes to almost everything,” she says, explaining how in the last couple of years she has scored the soundtrack to Brian Crano’s film Permission, produced Scottish folk band Lau, worked with Sufjan Stevens, John Cale, RZA, Norah Jones and Daniel Johnston (among others), and collaborat­ed with Benjamin Lazar Davis on last year’s wonky pop curio Let It Be You.

Damned Devotion is her fifth album, and feels like a kind of reckoning, a taking stock, and a work of renewed focus. If 2014’s The Classic was a high-concept exercise in soul pastiche, here she returns to her core territory, forensical­ly charting the human heart, tracking the course of midlife love, lust and loss. Real Life was, by her own admission, a shameless attempt to make an Al green record. But this is a darker affair, with an air of gothic R&B, at times like Ann Peebles produced by Timbaland.

The opening track “Wonderful” effectivel­y sets the tone: it’s a haunted reverie, built on minimal programmed beats and an electric piano of such reverby desolation, it sounds like it was recorded at the very bottom of the well of loneliness.

“I’m losing these junk souvenirs,” she

sings, implacably, “What did they ever do but tangle up my game?” It feels like she has remorseles­sly cut all the flourishes, the grace notes, that make her so often an easy-listening joy, and reduced her art to a guttering flame. It’s followed by the irresistib­le honeyed siren song of lead single “Warning Bell”, and between them they set out Damned Devotion as the most magnificen­tly seductive torch song opus

More than any other JAPW album, it feels built from the beats up

since the second Portishead album.

But Wasser is too polyvalent and restless an artist to stick to one mode for long. More than any previous JAPW album, Damned

Devotion feels built from the beats up – often from Joan’s own programmin­g. But “Tell Me” is a lithe and slinky soul number which demonstrat­es the supple grace of her band – longstandi­ng drummer Parker Kindred joined by keyboard player Thomas Bartlett, with Joan herself multitrack­ed as her own call-andrespons­e back-up singers, while “Steed”

introduces the polymorpho­usly perverse spirit of Jean genet to a horny Paisley Park funk workout.

The hint of Prince is suggestive. The record’s title track seems to aim at some synthesis of eros and agape, or the carnal and the oceanic, with brutalist hip-hop beats and simmering filtered vocals (“Take me and you won’t be sorry... firebrand my

breath at 2am”) building to an almost gospel chorus. It even ends on a cute Wendy-and-Lisa-like rococo flourish of angelic harmony. But like Prince, always hoping to finetune the balance of spooky electric and lovesexy, Joan seems more successful when she follows one or the other impulse rather than attempting a compromise.

Devotion is expressed most beautifull­y on “What Was It Like”, a heartbreak­ingly sweet memoir of her father (“My dance recitals were never concise, you never missed them/You were always there for me”). And the damned despair comes to perfection on “Silly Me”, the Billieholi­day-on-hi-Records ballad that Wasser has long been threatenin­g to perfect. Not much more than a shuffling drum machine and some Rhodes piano at first, it descends through several circles of hell until Joan is joined by a choir of fallen angels to sing a line of the most exquisite abjection: “God help me to never see my reflection in your eyes.”

Wasser has suggested the album is essentiall­y asking the question, ‘how does one live a devoted life without becoming obsessed or losing one’s mind?’ It’s worth rememberin­g that she was named after Joan of Arc, and has sometimes lived with a similar intensity of vocation. In fact, “I Was Everyone”, the closing track from her 2011 album The Deep Field, is written from Joan of Arc’s perspectiv­e: “And what if I woke up tomorrow not afraid?/I could decide to trust the voices and take courage?” here, the closing, hymn-like “I Don’t Mind”, feels like a song written in the afterglow of a bonfire of illusions. “Once all the voices begin to fall inaudible/ Who am I left with?/I don’t know for sure/ But through the snowfall I am listening/And I hope you’re listening too.” It’s a beautiful hymn to receptivit­y and a reminder once again that no-one today negotiates the sacred and profane quite like Joan Wasser.

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