The Day

Ariana Grande triumphs over heartbreak on seventh studio album, ‘eternal sunshine’

- By MARIA SHERMAN AP Music Writer

The new Ariana Grande era — marked by her seventh studio album and first in nearly four years, “eternal sunshine” — began with a question: “Yes, And?”

The single — named after a general rule of thumb in improvisat­ional comedy — marked a new musical pivot for the performer. Sure, she was working with one of the greatest pop producers of all time again — the mysterious Swedish powerhouse Max Martin — but now, she was filtering her earworm hooks through ’90s house music. The bridge has echoes of “Vogue” (not unlike Beyoncé’s “Break My Soul”) and its lyrics recall a kind of Lady Gaga “Born This Way” empowermen­t (an example: “Boy, come on, put your lipstick on/No one can tell you nothin’”) while also offering a public defense to tabloid representa­tion (“Don’t comment on my body, do not reply.”) It’s a great song, but it doesn’t include Grande’s signature runs; there’s no larger-than-life vocal moment, what her listeners have come to know her for. In some ways, it makes “Yes, And?” a bit of a red herring on “eternal sunshine.”

Belt she does throughout the release — her idiosyncra­tic vocal tone stretches across the funky, finger-snapping, shimmery disco of “Bye.” There’s her breathy falsetto on “Don’t Wanna Break Up” (sung with “I’m too much to you/ So I really gotta do the thing I don’t wanna do,” a reminder that this is her first album since her divorce from real estate agent Dalton Gomez), the pop “Supernatur­al,” and the wobbly ’00s R&B pop of “True Story,” which is like a long lost Destiny’s Child cut. In the latter, her weapons are once again raised: “I’ll play whatever part you need me to,” she sings. “And, I’ll be good in it, too.”

There’s a kind of Y2K revivalism here done in distinct Grande fashion — and at least partially inspired by her girl group-inspired track “Fantasize,” which leaked on TikTok last summer. That’s evident on a reimaginat­ion of “The Boy Is Mine,” inspired by the Brandy and Monica classic, with a dramatic tempo change.

For a record completed in around three-and-a-half months — notably after she finished filming “Wicked,” as she told her fans long ago was the plan — there’s marked innovation and evolution here. “Imperfect for you” is another slight genre shift, with its distorted synths sounding like an out-of-tune guitar atop a blues-y trap beat. And there’s the big, Robyn-esque euro-pop production of “we can’t be friends (wait for your love),” which explodes into a string crescendo, electronic sounds effortless­ly blending into organic ones.

There’s also quite a bit of love on this album, for someone navigating life after marriage; the tragic loss of another partner, the rapper Mac Miller, who died of an accidental overdose; and the terrorist attack on her show in Manchester, England in 2017. Instead of leaning into a kind of overt optimism like on past releases — “Thank U, Next,” anyone? — Grande allows herself to feel it all, even when she wishes she couldn’t.

Any missteps are blips — an overly explanativ­e intro and interlude likely included to give the record a kind of “concept album” shape, as Grande has said in interviews, which could’ve been excised. The contradict­ion, of course, is that an apparent honesty on Grande’s albums has always been a highlight: like in the closer “Ordinary Things,” which includes a recording of her grandma (and a credit: “featuring Nonna.”)

Grande, a lifelong and well-documented Jim Carrey fan, lifted her album title from the 2004 rom-com “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” which centers the impossibil­ity of erasing a relationsh­ip through the selective removal of memories. In the years since, the film has become a dorm room cult classic and, in an age of feminist blogging, criticized for its apparent perpetuati­on of a “manic pixie dream girl” stereotype (in the form of Kate Winslet’s Clementine Kruczynski), where a male protagonis­t fails to see a woman’s complexiti­es as a whole person and, rather, focuses on her idiosyncra­sies and the ways in which she may “fix” him.

But the film is a bit more complex than that, something Grande might’ve known for a while now. On Grande’s “eternal sunshine,” various emotional depths and perception­s seem to layer on top of one another. Often, she is in love and she is heartbroke­n, she is self-assured and she is struggling to figure out who she is, she is considerin­g the way public perception has affected her and balking against it, she is Jim Carrey and Kate Winslet.

For the listener, it is a treat. Grande has released yet another strong R&B-pop record in which those complicati­ons are articulate­d but now maybe never solved, and with her range front and center. Yes, and it is worth a few listens.

 ?? REPUBLIC RECORDS VIA AP ?? “Eternal Sunshine” by Ariana Grande
REPUBLIC RECORDS VIA AP “Eternal Sunshine” by Ariana Grande

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