The Guardian (USA)

Michael Kiwanuka: Kiwanuka review – one of the greatest albums of the decade

- Dave Simpson

Michael Kiwanuka’s first two albums establishe­d him as a folksy symphonic soul man akin to Bill Withers and Terry Callier, and set the bar pretty high. This one knocks it skyward. Together with producer-to-thestars Danger Mouse and London hiphop producer Inflo, the British-Ugandan 32-year-old has broadened his territory to stretch from Donny Hathaway-style melancholy soul through to Rolling Stones-y gospel rock, psychedeli­c soul and breakbeat. There are strings and harps, samples of civil rights campaigner­s, Hendrix-type frazzled guitars and Burt Bacharach-type orchestrat­ions. The dreamlike, revelatory quality is reminiscen­t of Marvin Gaye’s What’s Going On and Primal Scream’s Screamadel­ica.

Unusually, in these streaming-led times, Kiwanuka is a contemplat­ive song cycle intended to be listened to in one extended sitting, which he says is “a reaction against this fastpaced, throwaway, machine-led world”.

It sounds timeless and contempora­ry; the instrument­al interludes and the stylistic and tempo shifts all hang together because of his warm, sincere vocals and fantastic songwritin­g. At the core is Kiwanuka’s inner battle between anxiety, self-doubt, spirituali­ty and wisdom, which is then set against racism and rueful glances at the state of the world. Thus, killer opener You Ain’t the Problem is both an encouragin­g nudge to himself and a sharp put-down of attitudes towards immigratio­n: “If you don’t belong, you’re not the problem.”

Hero compares the murder of 60s activist Fred Hampton with recent US police shootings (“on the news again, I guess they killed another”), also referenced in the insistent Rolling (“No tears for the young, a bullet if you’re wrong”). Piano Joint (This Kind of Love) and Hard to Say Goodbye are beautifull­y pensive and Final Days ponders nuclear apocalypse. But for all its melancholy, Kiwanuka is never downbeat. There are moments – such as the “Time is the healer” gospel choir in I’ve Been Dazed, or hopeful closer Light

– when positivity bursts through with such dazzling effect you want to cheer. Kiwanuka is a bold, expansive, heartfelt, sublime album. He’s snuck in at the final whistle, but surely this is among the decade’s best.

 ??  ?? Bold, expansive and heartfelt … Michael Kiwanuka. Photograph: Olivia Rose
Bold, expansive and heartfelt … Michael Kiwanuka. Photograph: Olivia Rose
 ??  ?? Michael Kiwanuka: Kiwanuka album art work
Michael Kiwanuka: Kiwanuka album art work

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