The Guardian - G2

Alexis Petridis’s album of the week Baffling bad-girl reboot falls flat

Camila Cabello C,XOXO

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Pop Label Polydor ★★☆☆☆

The release of I Luv It, the first single from Camila Cabello’s fourth solo album, brought with it something new for the 27-yearold singer: a degree of musical controvers­y. Ever since her 2017 single Havana sold a staggering 10m copies in the US alone, Cabello has made her way dealing in pleasantly undemandin­g, low-risk Latin American pop. Something of the eager-to-please TV talent show contestant she had once been – Cabello first found fame as part of US X Factor semi-finalist girl band Fifth Harmony – seemed to cling to her: her lyrics contained no swearing because she wanted to be “a good example for younger girls”.

I Luv It was audibly different: a brief burst of wilfully repetitiou­s and tinny-sounding hyperpop that staggered along the line that separates insistent from annoying. Moreover, some people suggested it bore rather too much resemblanc­e to Charli xcx’s 2017 single I Got It. Charli xcx herself posted a parody of Cabello’s announceme­nt video to TikTok, with I Got It replacing I Luv It on the soundtrack: cue the everdeligh­tful sound of diehard fans arguing with each other online.

But perhaps a bit of controvers­y is exactly what Cabello is going for. Clearly a dramatic rethink has taken place, possibly occasioned by the relatively sluggish sales of her last album Familia. This album’s signature sound is skeletal and sketchy: a solitary synth or piano line and the odd sample over a beat, songs that either feel melodicall­y vaporous, such as Chanel No 5, or which alight on a hook then absolutely hammer it into the ground, as on I Luv It or Dream-Girls. The business of being a good example for younger girls is apparently no longer foremost in her mind: it’s all “Shawty’s the shit” this and “I guess I’ll fuck around” that, and “Does she get this wet for you, baby?” the other. Cabello’s vocals, traditiona­lly big on emoting and showy runs – have been largely transforme­d into a mush-mouthed hip-hop-inspired delivery, given an extra sheen of incomprehe­nsibility by the trowelling-on of AutoTune.

In the context of Cabello’s oeuvre, this is all pretty radical to the point of being occasional­ly baffling. C,XOXO has been subject to some genuinely curious decisions: on Uuugly, one of two songs featuring Drake, she contribute­s a grand total of two words of harmonies and a single line of ghostly backing vocals. She isn’t present at all on Pink XOXO, a brief interlude featuring PinkPanthe­ress that, given the brevity of PinkPanthe­ress’s own work, just sounds like a PinkPanthe­ress track dumped in the middle of someone else’s album. It’s actually pretty good, with a sweetly appealing melody, but it also feels odd and out of place: what is it doing here?

Much as you want to applaud an artist for taking risks in the risk-averse world of mainstream 21st-century pop, you find yourself asking a similar question of Cabello herself. She often sounds slightly uncomforta­ble, as if she’s speculativ­ely trying on an outfit that doesn’t quite suit her. The monotonal rap vocal on Twentysome­things seems to be proceeding at a pace slightly too fast for her to keep up with: you think she’s going to fall out of time, making listening to it a slightly more nerve-racking experience than one suspects it’s meant to be. When Lil Nas X makes a cameo appearance on He Knows, he simultaneo­usly transforms and takes over the track completely: there’s an assurance and swagger to his performanc­e that’s noticeably lacking in the main attraction. Cabello often feels like a guest on her own album, drifting through songs too slender to stamp her own identity on and not entirely on board with a dramatic musical shift: an artist who appears to have been interior-decorated out of house and home.

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