The Daily Telegraph

One singer, one song – Adele gets to the heart of what music means

- Neil Mccormick

Review Easy On Me Adele ★★★★★

AFTER listening to Adele lay her soul on the line, I am inclined to go very easy on her. It is a bold comeback single from the biggest selling contempora­ry music artist in the world, because she dares to just do what she does best, eschewing fashion, trends, and all music-business marketing logic to deliver a bare-bones ballad with all the feeling she can muster. Easy On Me is as stripped down as a song can be, just a vocal and piano in close communion.

I’m sure there are record company executives all over the world holding their breath and praying that it works, and privately wondering if they would have been better off adding orchestras, beats and guest rappers.

After the long, bare 18 months of pandemic, the return of Adele Adkins is expected to save the music business by delivering the first unassailab­le multi-billion-streaming, multi-millionsel­ling, bulletproo­f blockbuste­r smash of our post-covid world. And she gives them a ballad in a style that practicall­y predates recorded music history.

There is nothing to go on here but a song and a singer delivering a deeplyfelt emotional truth from the heart. But isn’t that the very essence of what music is, and why it means so much to us?

So, eschewing the clever lyrical tease (Hello, it’s me) and sleekly effective ever-building power production of Adele’s last big comeback single – 2015’s global super smash hit Hello

– this time around she has gone back to basics. Easy on Me showcases the recently divorced singer pleading for understand­ing and forgivenes­s from her ex. It is a huge, shame- and excuse-filled apology, with the chorus pleading: “Go easy on me baby / I was still a child / Didn’t get the chance to feel / The world around me / I had no time to choose what I chose to do / So go easy on me.”

Adele lays the water metaphors on thick in an opening verse in which she’s been looking in vain for gold in a river where she’s been simultaneo­usly washing her hands, failing to swim and drowning in silence.

But the singing is the thing. Why do some voices reach so deep and hit us so hard? It’s a beautiful mystery, but right now Adele possesses the voice that digs deepest into the soul of the world.

There are lots of long, fluctuatin­g notes ripe with emotion, as words are stretched almost to breaking point with at least eight notes flowing through “easy” alone, or rather “ee-ee-ee-ee-ee-ee-easeeee” as Adele delivers it. The sentiment is sincere, the voice is utterly compelling, and all that lies beneath it is a smoothly played

‘Why do some voices reach so deep and hit us so hard? Adele’s voice digs deepest into the soul of the world’

piano, resonant notes underpinni­ng Adele as her unconstrai­ned performanc­e draws us into her emotional world with hypnotic power. A bass drum and bass guitar kick in about halfway through, to add some substance and thicken up the sound, but this song is all about the piano, the voice and the feeling.

In other words, it does what music is meant to do. I hope it reminds those listening that songs don’t need overloaded state-of-the-art production, ear-bashing hooks, trendy twists or gimmicky guest stars. They need heart and soul, flowing melodies, sincerely felt lyrics, and a voice that can carry emotion and demand attention.

In those regards, Adele’s comeback is a thing of beauty and wonder.

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 ?? ?? Adele has released her first track in six years, Easy on Me, which is from her new album which will come out in November
Adele has released her first track in six years, Easy on Me, which is from her new album which will come out in November

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