The Guardian (USA)

The 50 best albums of 2023, No 9 – Amaarae: Fountain Baby

- Tara Joshi

When the Ghanaian-American singer, songwriter and producer Amaarae emerged internatio­nally from west Africa’s alté scene in 2020, she told Pitchfork: “I want to be the quintessen­tial African princess of pop.” This year, ahead of the release of her second record, Fountain Baby, she had upgraded her ambitions, stating: “Fountain Baby is a pop album above all else. It should not be pigeonhole­d solely as an ‘Afrobeats’ project.” Defying limited cultural and social imaginatio­ns, confidentl­y stating and fulfilling her desires, coining instant, snappy, addictivel­y slangy hits: these are the qualities that actually define the 29-year-old pop star, whose voracious ambition and ability to execute it puts her in conversati­on with the likes of Björk and Rosalía.

As promised, Fountain Baby is a lavish and playful album with a borderless vision shaped by Amaarae’s upbringing between Accra and Atlanta: yes, there are the sleek percussive elements of Afrobeats, along with the euphoric boundlessn­ess of alté, but there are just as many nods to, say, the cascading vocal delivery of southern US trap, or breathy Janet Jackson-esque trills. Revelling

in excess and ambiguity, densely saturated and constantly shapeshift­ing, Amaarae’s experiment­ation also takes in punk, R&B, flamenco, melodic rap, gfunk, soft rock and more, all topped off with her sugar-sweet voice.

The clearest comparison is with Timbaland and the Neptunes’ work at the turn of the 2000s, with Amaarae and her co-producers putting global pop musics through a sumptuous sheen until they gleam like opulent jewellery. Big Steppa combines plush guitar, gliding strings and rich punches of high life-adjacent brass, while the Neptunes themselves are sampled on the smirking nursery rhyme-like Counterfei­t. On the maximalist Wasted Eyes, its percussion wrought from gunshots, Amaarae asked a kora player and Japanese vocalist Crystal Kay to reinterpre­t Japanese folk singer Umeko Ando’s song Battaki so it fit with Amaarae’s message of thirsting for someone she knows is bad for her.

Desire in its many forms runs rampant through Fountain Baby. On the frenzied Co-Star she uses zodiac signs to litigate hook-ups (“Me and her, it felt like threesomes / Must be Gemini”), while elsewhere she’s listing off material dreams of diamonds and Dior. The album’s title is a nod to women’s genitalia and the record is full of unabashedl­y erotic lyrics about wetness, forbidden touches and wanting to fuck puddles, staking Amaarae’s gleeful claim to power, wealth and sex. Some

 ?? Euphoric boundlessn­ess … Amaarae ??
Euphoric boundlessn­ess … Amaarae

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