Chicago Sun-Times

SWEET & LOW

Ariana Grande’s ‘Sweetener’ is her most interestin­g — and confoundin­g — album yet

- BY MAEVE MCDERMOTT

It’s impossible to understand “Sweetener,” Ariana Grande’s fourth and latest album, without mentioning the career rupture that influenced it: the 2017 bombings at her Manchester concert.

And then — for an artist whose music has always been characteri­zed for its romance — came her most dramatic love story yet: her whirlwind engagement to comedian Pete Davidson. The couple announced marriage plans in June after just weeks of dating.

On “Sweetener,” Grande plays off of these two life-altering events with 13 tracks that explore the stages of falling in love — and of loving yourself.

Every Grande album has been hailed as her “most grown-up yet” — a compliment that can double as condescens­ion.

Yet the growth Grande sings about on “Sweetener” is more existentia­l than the confident sexuality of her previous “adult” album, 2016’s “Dangerous Woman.” She’s preaching self-love while revealing her struggles, threading the life-affirming themes of lead single “No Tears Left to Cry” throughout the album.

How Grande soundtrack­s this journey is what makes “Sweetener” the most interestin­g — and, at times, confoundin­g — release of her career.

Max Martin, the Swedish production juggernaut behind most of Grande’s big hits, takes five tracks on the album, and Pharrell Williams, an equally prolific pop producer whose style is colorfully quirky, worked on seven.

Martin’s contributi­ons are uniformly strong. Responsibl­e for the singles “No Tears” and “God is a Woman,” Martin also is behind the album’s most obvious contender for its next single, “Breathing,” which achieves the same booming pop euphoria as Grande and Martin’s “Dangerous Woman” hit “Into You.”

If Martin’s tracks have a downside, it’s that his songs can bleed together —“Everytime” is reminiscen­t of his work on Taylor Swift’s “Reputation,” and the ’80s flourishes in “Breathing” invoke his work with Carly Rae Jepsen, two influences that aren’t necessaril­y a bad thing.

But, oy, those Pharrell tracks. How listeners feel about the sureto-be-divisive songs he wrote and/ or produced will largely depend on how they feel about “The Light is Coming,” Grande’s Pharrell-backed single with Nicki Minaj. It thrilled some fans as a kooky new direction and alienated others put off by its cartoonish beat and inexplicab­le sampled vocals, sourced from a 2009 CNN clip of a man yelling at Sen. Arlen Specter.

Pharrell’s seven “Sweetener” tracks don’t get any weirder than “The Light is Coming,” though they largely share the song’s maddeningl­y “extra” qualities. Pharrell, also a fashion designer, could stand to apply Coco Chanel’s famous words of sartorial wisdom —“Before you leave the house, look in the mirror and take one thing off ” — to his production­s, which often pile on adlibs, programmed beats and vocals-over-vocals to melodies that don’t quite make sense in the first place, veering left when you expect them to turn right.

That isn’t to say all of his and Grande’s tracks are duds. Highlights include the pair of drunk-inlove tracks “Blazed” and “R.E.M.,” as well as Grande’s Missy Elliott collaborat­ion “Borderline,” its only fault being that the rapper’s feature isn’t twice as long.

The Pharrell-produced closing track “Get Well Soon” is a soulful soundalike to Grande’s breakup ballad “Honeymoon Avenue,” the first song on her 2013 debut “Yours Truly,” sweetly bringing the pop star full circle with a track that celebrates enduring love.

More flashes of the throwback R&B that characteri­zed Grande’s earlier releases come courtesy of her longtime producer Tommy Brown, who partners with Grande on “Better Off,” on which she gets introspect­ive about a boy with a hot body but only half a heart.

Brown also backs “Pete Davidson,” a minutelong interlude about her fiancé — one of the many tracks that imagine Davidson as a dream incarnate as she sings, “I thought you into my life / Whoa, look at my mind.”

The best of Brown and Grande’s tracks is easily “Goodnight and Go,” a brilliant semi-cover of Imogen Heap’s 2005 track of the same name. Best known for her vocoder-filtered a cappella masterpiec­e “Hide and Seek,” Heap is a professed idol of Grande’s. And Grande keeps much of Heap’s “Goodnight and Go” songwritin­g intact, adding electronic flourishes to turn the original track’s glitchy pop into the radio anthem the song always deserved to be.

With its self-assured songwritin­g and a handful of promising potential singles, Grande’s “Sweetener” succeeds as a comeback narrative, giving the performer her happy ending after the toughest year of her career.

The album’s hit-or-miss track list is a further sign of growth for Grande, demonstrat­ing she’s willing to take risks with her music. That the album’s odder tracks don’t quite land, though, is a sign that Grande is still refining her instincts as an artist.

A voice as timeless as hers deserves songwritin­g and production to match.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Ariana Grande accepts an award at the MTV Video Music Awards on Monday in New York.
GETTY IMAGES Ariana Grande accepts an award at the MTV Video Music Awards on Monday in New York.

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