The Hamilton Spectator

N.E.R.D. lays down confident, cool grooves in No_One Ever Really Dies

- GLENN GAMBOA

In the seven years since N.E.R.D.’s last album, frontman Pharrell Williams has blossomed into a full-fledged superstar. He’s not just happy, feeling like a room without a roof. He’s a cultural force — with his own fashion line, TV spot on “The Voice” and high-profile songwritin­g and production gigs too numerous to mention.

His expanded ambitions are broadly on display for “No_One Ever Really Dies” (Columbia), with his childhood pals Chad Hugo and Shay Haley offering some groovy grounding as a foundation.

The album’s first single “Lemon,” which features Rihanna boldly rapping, is a straight-up stunner, taking the kind of infectious groove Williams and Hugo used to craft regularly as The Neptunes and raising it to new heights with high-flying, high-concept lyrics. They bounce between frantic talk of politics and laid-back boasting, with Rihanna nonchalant­ly declaring, “I get it how I live it, I live it how I get it.”

The potent “1000” follows a similarly artistical­ly formidable path, moving from Devoinflue­nced, frenetic new wave on the verses to a swaggering trap groove in the bridge and back again. “Don’t Don’t Do It” features them bouncing between a lilting, island-tinged groove and something more menacing, like a dark cloud spoiling a sunny day.

Throughout “No_One Ever Really Dies,” N.E.R.D. takes high-energy sounds that represent hard work and channels them into confident, cool grooves that signify success. In a way, it’s the sonic equivalent of how the group, especially Pharrell, has succeeded in the music industry.

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