Rolling Stone

BRITTANY’S VIBRANT SOUL

The Alabama Shakes leader rips up tradition at the roots on an ambitious solo LP

- By JON DOLAN

Brittany howard is a Southern rock & roll radical with a centuries-deep sense of history and some inspiring ideas about how to reshape it to fit our moment. As the lead singer and guitarist for the expansivel­y retro-minded Alabama Shakes, she’s combined ga

rage rock, soul, and psychedeli­a. In 2015, she convened the well-named punk-rock side project Thunderbit­ch, reimaginin­g vintage New York punk as roadhouse stomp.

Now, she’s put the Shakes on hold to make her solo debut (though a couple of band members are on hand, as is co-producer Shawn Everett, who engineered the Shakes’ 2015 LP, Sound & Color). Still, it’s a total departure, her kaleidosco­pic mix of decades’ worth of R&B, hip-hop, blues, and gospel, steeped in trippy laptop sonics and deeply personal political urgency.

“History Repeats” opens by establishi­ng what will become a theme, sounding at once ancient and modern as it suggests a natural bridge between James Brown goodfootin’, “Kiss”-era Prince, and Janelle Monáe’s sci-fi futurism. Howard’s voice takes falsetto flight like Smokey Robinson on the Sixties soul pastorale “Stay High,” and the somberly longing “Short and Sweet” recalls Nina Simone, just Howard and a soft guitar making longing feel intimate and infinite.

Howard’s newest collaborat­ors here are keyboardis­t Robert Glasper and drummer Nate Smith, worldly jazz musicians who help turn riffs like the cosmic boom-bap opus “13th Century Metal” into shape-shifting exploratio­ns.

The most potent moments interrogat­e Southern traditions in ways that go well beyond mere musical reinventio­n. “He Loves Me” is an anthem of lapsed religious devotion and personal freedom, sampling a black preacher who testifies about a friend who’s going to live a long life “’cause he ain’t worried about nothing,” as Howard’s guitar makes liberated noise and she praises her personal Jesus: “I know He still loves me/I know He still loves me when I’m smoking blunts.”

And then there’s “Georgia,” a protest jam for our current right-wing apocalypse. Over a sinewy beat and a meditative organ, Howard sings a forlorn ode to a state that flagrantly depressed African American voter turnout in the 2018 election and recently passed one of the country’s most egregious anti-abortion laws. Howard is mindful of Ray Charles’ “Georgia on My Mind,” turning its wistful nostalgia into something much sadder. “I just want Georgia to notice me,” she sings, confrontin­g oppression with faint hope. It’s a strikingly bold moment on a record that’s full of them.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States