The Columbus Dispatch

Pop- star narrative of Grande soars above sorrowful tribute

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No pop career should ever have a terrorist attack as a milestone.

The bombing right after Ariana Grande’s concert in Manchester, England, in May 2017 is one inevitable backdrop to her fourth studio album, “Sweetener.”

Released on Aug. 17, the album zoomed to No. 1.

“Sweetener” (Republic) begins with the brief, mournful, a cappella “Raindrops (An Angel Cried)”: a verse of the Four Seasons song “An Angel Cried.” And it ends with vocal harmonies in “Get Well Soon,” a compendium of sympathy and 21stcentur­y advice — “Unfollow fear and just say you are blocked” — that also promises, “I’ll be right there just to hug you.” The length of the track, including a long silence at the end, is 5:22, memorializ­ing the day of the attack.

But Grande, 25, won’t let sorrow take over her popstar narrative. Album by album, she has constructe­d a persona of cheerful female empowermen­t. She’s not a woman battling her way forward. She’s simply commandeer­ing what she has always deserved and fully expects, including authority, devotion and pleasure.

Grande backs up her statements with song-anddance mastery. Although she has learned plenty from Mariah Carey, Janet Jackson, Madonna, Michael Jackson and many others, Singer Ariana Grande, performing at the “One Love Manchester” tribute concert

her own voice is immediatel­y recognizab­le. It can be silky, breathy or cutting, swooping through long melismas or jabbing out short R&B phrases; it’s always supple and airborne, never forced.

With “Sweetener,” she has reaffirmed that the lightness of her voice is best suited for bliss and satisfacti­on, not mourning.

The first single from “Sweetener” was “No Tears Left To Cry,” a conspicuou­s pivot. The track initially sounds like an elegy, but only for its first 20 seconds; then it speeds up to become a dance track, turning to positive thinking and a focus on the here and now.

Grande chants, “I’m loving and living and picking it up,” and insists, “We way too fly to partake in all this hate/We out here vibing.”

She makes her joy autobiogra­phical — and musically experiment­al,

with wandering harmonies and eccentric percussion — in “Pete Davidson,” a minute-long track named after her fiance (a “Saturday Night Live” comedian) that exults, “Gonna be happy, happy,” and in “Successful,” which un-humbly brags, “It feels so good to be so young and have this fun and be successful/I’m so successful!”

The album’s central manifesto is “God Is a Woman,” a minor-key procession­al that ascends to a churchy chorus. Borrowing a tactic from Madonna, it conflates sexual and religious passion: “Baby lay me down and let’s pray/I’m telling you the way I like it, how I want it,” Grande coos.

In the song’s video clip, Madonna’s voice makes a cameo as the voice of God, vowing vengeance; then Grande shatters a glass ceiling. But Grande’s attitude is post-Madonna; it’s not a matter of blasphemy and taboo-breaking anymore, just an announceme­nt of what she’s entitled to.

The sacred-secular juxtaposit­ions continue in the title song, a Pharrell Williams production that switches between gospelly piano chords — as Grande praises how her man can “bring the bitter taste to a halt” — and more dissonant hip-hop as she enjoys how “you make me say ‘oh!”’

Grande works with two main producers on the album, Williams and longtime pop hitmaker Max Martin (who is joined as usual by assorted collaborat­ors). Williams pushes toward hip-hop’s loops and angularity, letting Grande divide and redivide rhythms in songs such as the dreamlogic reverie of “R.E.M.” Martin prefers symmetry and more standard pop storytelli­ng.

But both of them know their truest asset: Grande’s voice.

They open up ample space for it between purring low bass and the snap of (sampled or synthetic) snares and high-hats. Nearly everything else is Grande — lead and backup vocals, melodies and asides, teasing and yearning, motion and afterglow and togetherne­ss. She’s her own choir, support group and posse.

A few guest vocalists (Williams, Nicki Minaj, Missy Elliott) provide a little grit for contrast, but Grande sails above any fray, past or present. Her aplomb is her triumph. Ten shows to watch or record: • “Married to Medicine”

(8 p.m., Sunday, Bravo): When the reality series returns for a sixth season, Dr. Jackie Walters and Dr. Simone Whitmore have patched things up with their husbands. The two apparently have the power to heal relationsh­ips as well as their patients. • “RBG” (9 p.m. and midnight, Monday, CNN): The acclaimed documentar­y, making its TV debut, explores the life and legacy of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, who in recent years has been dubbed a pop-culture icon. • “Better Call Saul” (9 p.m., Monday, AMC): As the series intensifie­s, Jimmy (Bob Odenkirk) identifies a new market for his talents, Mike (Jonathan Banks) vets a potential partnershi­p and Kim (Rhea Seehorn) drives a hard bargain. • “Mayans M.C.” (10 p.m. Tuesday, FX): The new “Sons of Anarchy” spin-off — set in a post-Jax Teller world — follows Ezekiel “EZ” Reyes (JD Pardo), who is fresh out of prison and trying to rebuild his life when he is lured into the crimes of a Latino biker club operating on the California-Mexico border. • “The Purge” (10 p.m., Tuesday, USA and Syfy): Based on the big-screen horror franchise, the new drama series is set in a near-future dystopia where all crime — including murder — is legal for one night a year.

• “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelph­ia” “I Love You, America” Football” “Sunday Night “Marvel’s Iron Fist” “Stand Up to Cancer”

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