Los Angeles Times

Cardi B’s ‘Invasion of Privacy’ is personal

- MIKAEL WOOD POP MUSIC CRITIC

A year ago — heck, let’s say six months ago — Cardi B would have gone only one place to tell the world she was pregnant, and that’s Instagram.

The social-media app is where this young Bronxborn rapper first built a following as a charming and deeply honest chronicler of her work in the city’s strip joints. And it’s the platform she continued to use to transition into music at a moment when accessibil­ity (or at least its illusion) can trump the pop-star mystique of old.

But that was before Cardi B — whose inescapabl­e “Bodak Yellow” topped Billboard’s Hot 100 in September — had come within striking distance of the kind of prestige that legacy media is still thought to confer.

So when she made her big announceme­nt this past weekend, she didn’t do it online but on “Saturday Night Live,” where she performed her song “Be Careful” while wearing a clingy Christian Siriano gown that revealed the baby bump she’d spent the previous few weeks carefully concealing.

Could “SNL” offer Cardi B an audience larger than her 21 million Instagram followers? Nope. But her appearance symbolized her hard-fought ascent just hours after Friday’s release of her major-label debut album, “Invasion of Privacy.”

More symbols are in the offing too: On Monday, she’ll co-host “The Tonight Show

Starring Jimmy Fallon,” and this weekend, she’s set to perform at Coachella.

You can hear signs of Cardi B’s elevated standing throughout “Invasion of Privacy” — in the sleek pop production of a song like “Thru Your Phone,” in highprofil­e cameos by SZA and J Balvin and Chance the Rapper, in an interpolat­ion of a Lauryn Hill tune in “Be Careful” that Cardi B has said the former Fugee personally approved.

Yet what’s remarkable about the album is how un-smoothed-out Cardi B sounds in this new environmen­t. Though she clearly values the approval of oldfashion­ed arbiters, she won’t dull her rough edges, as many have before her, to get it; the vivid result gives the impression that she’s still in communion with her core audience — and indeed that her fans are somehow sharing in her success.

Her rapping demonstrat­es that relatabili­ty derives from specificit­y rather than any outright attempt to be universal.

“Invasion of Privacy” opens with the dramatic “Get Up 10,” in which Cardi B runs down her background — “Used to dance in a club right across from my school” — in long lines full of unfiltered (and largely unprintabl­e) detail. In “Money Bag” and “She Bad,” she boasts about her growing riches with an infectious blend of exuberance and practicali­ty.

“I could buy designer, but this Fashion Nova fit,” she raps in the latter, right after proposing a threesome with Rihanna and Chrissy Teigen.

Other tracks take up less rarefied themes, such as “Thru Your Phone,” which addresses an unfaithful lover, and “Be Careful,” where she quotes Hill (from her “Ex-Factor”) to urge another guy to “care for me, care for me / Always said that you’d be there for me, there for me.”

But as in “I Like It” — a bilingual ode to New York built on an instantly recognizab­le sample of Pete Rodriguez’s late-’60s boogaloo smash — Cardi B so effectivel­y customizes these sentiments through her words and delivery that the songs make you feel like she’s speaking directly to you.

mikael.wood@latimes.com Twitter: @mikaelwood

 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision / Associated Press ?? CARDI B kicks it up a notch at the iHeartRadi­o Music Awards at the Forum in March.
Chris Pizzello Invision / Associated Press CARDI B kicks it up a notch at the iHeartRadi­o Music Awards at the Forum in March.
 ?? Atlantic Records ?? THE RAPPER’S debut album, on Atlantic, was released Friday.
Atlantic Records THE RAPPER’S debut album, on Atlantic, was released Friday.
 ?? Chris Pizzello Invision / AP ?? CARDI B, at iHeartRadi­o awards, aims high but does it her own way.
Chris Pizzello Invision / AP CARDI B, at iHeartRadi­o awards, aims high but does it her own way.

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