Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chainsmoke­rs get stuck in nasty habit

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C The Chainsmoke­rs Memories Do Not Open Columbia

The Chainsmoke­rs wowed with their infectious single “Closer” and gave Coldplay a trendy electronic dance music makeover on “Something Just Like This.” But high hopes for a whole album have gone up in smoke.

This 12-track collection not only fails to break new ground, it spins its tires into a deep hole. The songs usually begin with slow, moody piano that builds into monster synth beats, interrupte­d by a period of calm. That’s thrilling in a single dose. It’s formulaic and tiresome on a full album.

The Chainsmoke­rs are best when they let others sing, like Emily Warren on “Don’t Say” and “Just My Type”, Jhene Aiko on “Wake Up Alone” and the lovely Coldplay collaborat­ion.

Cynics might say this is just an attempt by a couple of musical hucksters — one approachin­g 30 and the other on the other side of that milestone — to appeal to teens with easily digestible, morose dance songs punctuated with expletives that give it an appearance of honesty.

Standing still like this in EDM — like standing still in a club, for that matter — is a dangerous propositio­n. Other DJs are creating thrilling stuff — Calvin Harris’ “Slide” or Zedd’s “Stay” — so to hear The Chainsmoke­rs blowing the same old smoke is a real disappoint­ment.

Hot track: “Something Like This”

— MARK KENNEDY

The Associated Press

B Rick Ross Rather You Than Me Epic

Many changes afoot for Rick Ross. Eleven years since his classic Port of Miami, the baritone rapper/flashy producer has shifted labels (Def Jam for Epic), followed the more caramel-coated R&B muse that filled the most of his last album, the slept upon Black Market of 2015, and crafted a new pro-black stance with politicize­d sidebars (“I’m happy Donald Trump became president, because we gotta destroy before we elevate”) far from his usual drugs-money-strippers-power mien.

Ross and co-producers Bink and Lil’ C take Thom Bell’s “People Make the World Go Round” for a swanky new ride (the corny but cool “I Think She Likes Me”).

Ross joins with Philly pal Meek Mill and pensive R&B vocalist Anthony Hamilton for the product-placement-hop “Lamborghin­i Doors.” Then Ross pairs with new jack swing king Raphael Saadiq for the groovy, thought-provoking “Apple of My Eye” and some of that aforementi­oned Trump trash talking. That braggadoci­o and trash chat continue with “Idols Become Rivals.”

Hot tracks: “Apple of My Eye,” “I Think She Likes Me”

— A.D. AMOROSI

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

A- The Mavericks Brand New Day Mondo Mundo/Thirty Tigers

No band sounds quite like the Mavericks. Who else weaves such an audaciousl­y big and broad musical tapestry that incorporat­es everything from Phil Spector Wall of Sound pop to Frank Sinatra swing, along with generous nods to the group’s country and Latin roots?

It helps to have a singer as gifted as Raul Malo, who has the pipes to match the Mavericks’ dense sound. Even at his most operatic Roy Orbison-esque vocals, he skirts the florid and the bombastic to make a direct emotional connection.

Malo co-wrote or wrote all the songs. On “Easy as It Seems,” he sings, “Building walls between us doesn’t fix a thing.” Of course, it’s hard not to read that as sly political commentary, but the Mavericks’ insistentl­y joyous music also shows what can happen when barriers between musical styles are so skillfully and merrily shattered.

Hot tracks: “Easy as It Seems,” the banjo-driven and bluegrass-flavored “Rolling Along,” the romantic “I Will Be Yours”

— NICK CRISTIANO

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

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