The Guardian (USA)

Ed Sheeran: Subtract review – easily his best ever album

- Alexis Petridis

Ed Sheeran famously keeps one eye on the numbers. A decade ago, he establishe­d his trademark, a pop take on the sensitive singer-songwriter trope with a healthy relationsh­ip to rap and R&B that has allowed him to flit across genres, imposing his indelible style on everything from Afrobeats to Eminem and Bring Me the Horizon collaborat­ions. It’s the smartest thing a pop star could do at the dawn of the streaming age, where success is tied to your ability to feature on as many genretheme­d playlists as possible – a strategy borne out by Sheeran’s 150m record sales – but also proof of fairly absurd talent: if it was that easy, everyone would be doing it. Under the circumstan­ces, it’s hard not to be impressed by how wholeheart­edly Sheeran has thrown himself into his fifth album, Subtract, a noticeably different prospect to previous albums.

He has not merely tapped Aaron Dessner of US indie band the National and co-producer of Taylor Swift’s folksy lockdown albums Folklore and Evermore to produce; he’s also eschewed his usual songwritin­g collaborat­ors. Intriguing­ly, their absence hasn’t affected

Sheeran’s commercial melodic facility: Colourblin­d seems as likely to soundtrack wedding first dances as Perfect or Thinking Out Loud; Curtains and Spark land their hooks quickly; the tune of Sycamore is disarmingl­y lovely. You even wonder if the songwriter­s-for-hire were holding him back: by far the least memorable song is the one pop super-producer Max Martin had a hand in, the underwhelm­ing Eyes Closed; it’s conspicuou­sly better when Sheeran tries something different, like the gorgeous, Beatles-y middle eight of Dusty.

Subtract’s insularity stems from a personal emergency Sheeran experience­d last spring. It was initially meant to be an album of acoustic songs he had spent a decade sculpting, an idea he scrapped after the death

of his friend Jamal Edwards, his wife Cherry Seaborn’s brush with cancer and a bruising copyright lawsuit over Shape of You. He started again, and the rush-written result is resolutely downcast and despondent, unlike any of his previous work. Dessner decks out the songs in tastefully muted shades, a sound familiar from Folklore’s softer moments: understate­d string arrangemen­ts; twinkling, spectral synthesise­rs; gentle breezes of feedback and reverbdren­ched electric guitars, the sound of fingers scraping along the strings as loud as the notes. It’s atmospheri­c and beautifull­y done, although it can get monotonous: the full drum kit and distorted guitar that kick in on Curtains are curiously jolting.

Beyond Eyes Closed, presumably included as a commercial safe bet, Sheeran’s crowd-pleasing excesses are nowhere to be seen. There’s none of the gimlet-eyed fixation on trends that created 2021’s Bad Habits, a hit evidently modelled after the Weeknd’s record-breaking Blinding Lights. The

Hills of Aberfeldy is faux Celtic folk, but those alert to the danger of Sheeran slipping once more into Galway Girl’s fiddle-de-de should be relieved that – like the folky melodies of Life Goes On and Salt Water – it feels darker and grittier, suggestive not of Sheeran courting a theme pub audience but tapping into a buried aspect of his musical DNA: around 2011, he was given to performing an a cappella version of the 19th-century folk song Wayfaring Stranger onstage. Meanwhile, on the forlorn End of Youth, you can hear him veering towards the hip-hop-influenced vocals familiar from Shape of You, but he never actually breaks into rapping, settling on a style with propulsive energy but none of the novelty aspect.

Sheeran is frequently mocked for writing in prosaic broad brushstrok­es, but the lyrics here feel focused and painfully blunt: on End of Youth, he appears racked by self-doubt; Sycamore brings us into the doctor’s waiting room as he and Seaborn await her diagnosis. There are occasional cracks of light, as on Curtains, but more usually uncertaint­y and fatalism have to stand in for optimism: “What can you do but pray?” “I’m moving forward – but to where?” “I close my eyes and take one step and say ‘well, here it goes’.”

Subtract should not be the stuff of fan-scaring reinventio­n. But Sheeran occupies the dead centre of the mainstream, where people want to know exactly what they’re getting: witness the relatively muted response to Adele’s only moderately different-sounding 30. Furthermor­e, its emotional tone is bound up with Sheeran’s story and it’s unclear how invested in his story his audience actually is: he is famously #relatable – a nice, ordinary bloke – but whether that means fans are fascinated by Sheeran per se, or merely Sheeran as a cipher for nice, ordinary people, is an interestin­g question: perhaps tellingly, the album’s second single, Boat, is his lowest-charting single in a decade. Subtract is easily his best album. But it’s also the first Ed Sheeran album since his debut for which you can’t confidentl­y predict eye-watering commercial success.

This week Alexis listened to

Thundercat & Tame Impala – No More LiesA collaborat­ion that sounds like a perfect meeting of minds: Thundercat’s elastic funk bass and penchant for yacht rock seamlessly combines with Tame Impala’s smooth electronic psychedeli­a.

 ?? Photograph: Annie Leibovitz ?? ‘Sheeran is frequently mocked for writing in prosaic broad brushstrok­es, but the lyrics here feel focused and painfully blunt.’
Photograph: Annie Leibovitz ‘Sheeran is frequently mocked for writing in prosaic broad brushstrok­es, but the lyrics here feel focused and painfully blunt.’
 ?? ?? The artwork for Subtract
The artwork for Subtract

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