Hartford Courant

Alicia Keys, sounding original and then digitally ‘unlocked’

- By Jon Pareles

“Keys,” Alicia Keys’ new album, is a high-concept experiment, the kind of self-conscious, introspect­ive project that has been emerging during the pandemic. Like Keys’ decision to no longer wear makeup in public, the album is in part a pushback against phony, superficia­l perfection. “I used to live hidden in a disguise,” she sings in “Plentiful,” an affirmatio­n of both religious faith and faith in herself that opens the album.

“Keys” also exposes the options available to a 21st-century musician, the countless digital tweaks and variations.

It’s a double album with 21 songs, eight of them appearing twice. It begins with “Originals,” tracks that Keys largely produced by herself, followed by “Unlocked”: alternate versions produced by Keys with hitmaker Michael Williams II, who bills himself as Mike WILL Made-it. Although the whole album is a studio production, “Originals” has a home-alone spirit, while “Unlocked” heads for the car and the club. Each half tells a different story about how songs move listeners, physically and emotionall­y.

The songs themselves explore desire, love and loneliness. Throughout her career, Keys has mingled the personal and the political, often invoking a woman’s strength and determinat­ion. But for most of “Keys,” she plays a woman in thrall to her feelings, by turns connected, needy, amorous, giving, desolate, jealous and, eventually, healing. Most of the songs vamp through a handful of chords as Keys gives her voice room to leap, to curl, to muse, to syncopate; she has rarely sounded so jazzy and improvisat­ory.

The track list of “Keys” isn’t completely symmetrica­l. Each half of the album varies the sequence and includes unique songs. But anyone can now reshuffle an album, and “Keys” invites every listener to think like a producer, hearing the possibilit­ies of timbre, propulsion, weight and context for every sound, while making clear how much those choices matter.

The “Originals” half of the album promises intimacy. Unlike her 2020 album, “Alicia,” which involved dozens of collaborat­ors, “Keys” usually brings in just a handful of musicians for each song. There’s still plenty of audio illusion in her “Originals” versions, with samples (like the Sade drumbeat in “Best of Me”), multitrack­ed backup vocals and scratchy-vinyl sound effects. Yet those songs determined­ly conjure small, private spaces as she sings her way through mixed emotions. In the tearful “Dead End Road” she’s desperatel­y trying to save a failing relationsh­ip, hinting at Aretha Franklin in a gospel-style call-andrespons­e with a choir that seems to be coming from inside her own head, still encouragin­g her to “try to make it.”

In “Only You,” Keys declares, “I am nothing without you here,” over reverberat­ing piano chords, with the tempo fluctuatin­g as if each line is occurring to her on the spot, although a band eventually joins her. And in “Is It Insane,” Keys is at the piano, leading a vintagesty­le jazz trio through complex chords as she sings about obsessing over an ex, deepening the grain of her voice like a latterday Billie Holiday or Nina Simone while she begs, “Take away the pain.”

The “Unlocked” production­s put Keys back into the digital grid that often defines current pop. After a gauzy intro, the second version of “Only You” announces the changeover with a steady, thumping beat and digitally chopped-up bits of piano and lead vocal along with sound effects, including sirens and a gunshot. It’s a sign of what’s to come: heftier beats, vocal phrases crisped into hooks, guest appearance­s (like a nonchalant Lil Wayne spot on “Nat King Cole.”).

The “Unlocked” tracks have virtues of their own. They push Keys’ voice upfront, with a sharper focus. They give Keys a confident strut when she’s enjoying the romance in “Skydive” and “Love When You Call My Name,” and they shift “Old Memories,” a 1950s-tinged song about what music can trigger, from regret toward resilience.

The “Unlocked” songs sound like public performanc­es, neat and armored and solidly more locked than unlocked. The “Originals” hint at freer, messier, closer, unresolved feelings, daringly unguarded — and thoroughly, openly human.

 ?? Alicia Keys (RCA) ?? ‘Keys’
Alicia Keys (RCA) ‘Keys’

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