The Day

A review of Rita Ora’s ‘Phoenix’

- By STEVE KNOPPER

RITA ORA “Phoenix” BOTTOM LINE: Talented pop singer could have told her story more dramatical­ly.

At 21, singer Rita Ora seemed poised to knock down the Lady Gaga Ceremonial Door to pop megastardo­m — the Kosovo-born singer had three No. 1 singles, opened for Coldplay and met her idol, Gwen Stefani, at an awards show. Then disturbing things happened. She believed her label, Jay-Z’s Roc Nation, marooned her with little promotion or attention, and they sued each other; she split with her boyfriend, DJ Calvin Harris, prompting him to yank the hit he produced, “I Will Never Let You Down,” from her debut album, “Ora.”

Six years and a recurring “Fifty Shades” film-series role later, Ora has signed to a new label, Atlantic, and made an album to show off her true, unfiltered personalit­y, freed from controllin­g labels and vengeful ex-boyfriends. And it’s … a little boring. Ora has a clean, strong pop voice, and she sounds fantastic in “First Time High” singing ooh-oohoohs against the synth hooks. She nicely shifts from low to high in “Only Want You,” building tension for the lyric “I don’t want to wear another minidress/to impress/another potential problem.”

Disappoint­ingly, she shies away from saying anything at all. “For You,” her hit from the “Fifty Shades Freed” soundtrack, is jammed with clichés: “I’m free as a bird,” “been waiting for a lifetime for you.” “Summer Love” barely tells the beginning of a love story, and Ora sings bouncy opener “Anywhere” as if she wants a fancy vacation rather than needing an escape from something consequent­ial. It’s only when the more interestin­g Cardi B, Bebe Rexha and Charli XCX show up for “Girls” (“I just wanna kiss girls, girls, girls”) that the album shows idiosyncra­sy, humor and drama. ED HARCOURT “Beyond the End” BOTTOM LINE: Moody, precise piano instrument­als from singer who specialize­s in lyrics.

Known for lines like “got a suitcase and a passport/but all I really want is you,” veteran British singer-songwriter Ed Harcourt bought a 1910 Hopkinson Baby Grand and downshifte­d to piano instrument­als (plus violin and cello) for this album of pristine background music. (It’s a break, he has said, from “the sheer barrage of news and vomit being rained down on us on a daily basis.”)

An accomplish­ed pianist who studied Debussy, Mozart and Philip Glass, Harcourt opts for mood and minimalism, possibly to score a nonexisten­t movie about wandering through the forest with a thundersto­rm on the way.

The titles are darkly evocative: “Wolves Changes Rivers” (the music suggests a new ballerina’s tentative first steps), “There Is Still a Fire” (a sketch for a subdued Christmas carol?), “For My Father” (equally playful and bleak), and finally “Whiskey Held My Sleep to Ransom” (a deeper, more conflicted “Feelings”).

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