Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

After divorce, Adele goes beyond heartbreak on ‘30’

- — Mark Kennedy, AP

Coming out of a divorce, one might expect Adele to write an album of heartbreak ballads. But, to expect anything short of the full spectrum of emotions from “30” would do the Grammy winner a disservice.

As one of the greatest voices of our time, it is no surprise that some of Adele’s shining moments on the album are on tracks bare enough that the strength of her vocals stand on their own. What is maybe more surprising is the delightful­ness of the songs that are a departure from her normal style.

Adele’s opener is unlike any she’s written before. “Strangers by Nature” whisks the listener into a black-and-white Audrey Hepburn-era film — whimsical and at times ominous. The album is given theatrical bookends with closer “Love Is a Game” mimicking some of these dramatic tones. It is a triumphant conclusion with harmonies in the chorus that give a nod to ’60s groups like the Supremes.

In between, there are songs about heartbreak and also love songs — to her son, to new loves (or, at least, those she’d like trying to love) and to herself.

Adele stretches herself on “30,” dipping into genres and tones that show her ability to deviate from more somber chart toppers like “Hello” and “Someone Like You.” There’s the bubble gum pop “Cry Your Heart Out,” dance anthem “Oh My God” and the Western-tinged “Can I Get It” — a song that is so divergent from typical Adele that it calls to mind Beyonce’s “Daddy Lessons.” In “My Little Love” and “All Night Parking,” Adele brings R&B to the record.

While there are jubilant moments on the album, Adele’s diary style songwritin­g ensures that pain is also present on the 12-track “30.” “My Little Love” is a movingly personal track that includes voice recordings of Adele comforting her young son and even crying as she describes her loneliness.

The pain is also tangible on “To Be Loved.” Its sparse production serves Adele beautifull­y. There is nothing to smooth out the emotion as her voice teeters on cracking.

The second half of the LP is much quieter than the first, filled with ballads more typical of the British singer. “Woman Like Me” shows her quiet confidence — she alludes to feelings of guilt and uncertaint­y in “My Little Love” and “I Drink Wine,” but in this song, she reasserts her own self-worth.

“Complacenc­y is the worst trait to have, are you crazy?” she croons, “You ain’t ever had, ain’t ever had a woman like me.”

If “30” is in fact a snapshot of the person Adele is at this moment in time, it is clear that the six years since “25” have led to growth and a more realized version of herself. There are traces of her younger self, but a renewed self-awareness.

“All I do is bleed into someone else,” she sings on “To Be Loved.” “I’ll be the one to catch myself this time.” — Ragan Clark, Associated Press

Nathaniel Rateliff : We’re not sure what the future holds, but if it sounds anything like “The Future,” we’re good.

That’s the title of the 11-track Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats’ glorious new vintage R&B album, bursting at the seams with fresh coolness. It has a sound grounded in the past but not mimicking it, a fresh, modern-retro vibe that makes sense once you listen.

“Gotta dig a lot of holes to get into something deep/ Gotta sing a lot of soul to know how to feel it,” Rateliff sings on “Something Ain’t Right.”

The Bob Dylan-esque title song leads to the funky “Survivor,” the meditative “Face Down in the Moment” and the soulful “Love Me Till I’m Gone,” which has “A Whiter Shade of Pale” vibe. Other highlights are “What If I” and the foot-stomper “Love Don’t.”

The lyrics explore wary optimism in an unforgivin­g world. “I’ve got the feeling that I can heal,” Rateliff sings on “Oh, I.” He and his band do exactly that on “The Future.”

 ?? ?? ‘The Future’ Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats (Stax Records)
‘The Future’ Nathaniel Rateliff & the Night Sweats (Stax Records)
 ?? ?? ‘30’ Adele (Columbia Records)
‘30’ Adele (Columbia Records)

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