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One of her highest-selling albums,
Namie Amuro
's
Play
was a windfall of basic R&B-flavored dance pop in 2007. The album opens with an intriguing cascade of marching band and synths in "Hide & Seek" that sounds incredible on its own.
Amuro
adds little in this first round. With the second track, she starts to pick up her presence, playing the kitten over a slinky beat track. Urban horn loops hold up "Can't Sleep, Can't Eat, I'm Sick" in a format that's not too far from a
Jennifer Lopez
track. "It's All About You" simply tries too hard at being something grandiose but falls victim to its own speed, faltering under the slur of
's vocals. "Funky Town" finds a similar fate, but with a
STOMP
-like backing drowning out
's aspirations instead. "Hello" seems to take a clever stylistic hook from
En Vogue
's rendition of "Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow," and balladry makes an appearance with "Should I Love Him?" "Top Secret" and "Violet Sauce" do little to pick the aesthetics back up, unfortunately, but "Baby Don't Cry" finally gives a peek at
's vocals with less electronic additions, and the album-ending "Pink Key" heads into fairly standard territory but does so with a nice focus on
's vocals and a simpler, more stripped-down bit of pop that serves her skills well. The fundamental change between her previous albums and
was
's significant shift from being primarily a ballad singer to taking on more ambitious dance-pop. The dance tunes don't always hit as squarely as
might hope, but it's a good effort and worth the time of her fans. ~ Adam Greenberg
Namie Amuro
's
Play
was a windfall of basic R&B-flavored dance pop in 2007. The album opens with an intriguing cascade of marching band and synths in "Hide & Seek" that sounds incredible on its own.
Amuro
adds little in this first round. With the second track, she starts to pick up her presence, playing the kitten over a slinky beat track. Urban horn loops hold up "Can't Sleep, Can't Eat, I'm Sick" in a format that's not too far from a
Jennifer Lopez
track. "It's All About You" simply tries too hard at being something grandiose but falls victim to its own speed, faltering under the slur of
's vocals. "Funky Town" finds a similar fate, but with a
STOMP
-like backing drowning out
's aspirations instead. "Hello" seems to take a clever stylistic hook from
En Vogue
's rendition of "Free Your Mind and Your Ass Will Follow," and balladry makes an appearance with "Should I Love Him?" "Top Secret" and "Violet Sauce" do little to pick the aesthetics back up, unfortunately, but "Baby Don't Cry" finally gives a peek at
's vocals with less electronic additions, and the album-ending "Pink Key" heads into fairly standard territory but does so with a nice focus on
's vocals and a simpler, more stripped-down bit of pop that serves her skills well. The fundamental change between her previous albums and
was
's significant shift from being primarily a ballad singer to taking on more ambitious dance-pop. The dance tunes don't always hit as squarely as
might hope, but it's a good effort and worth the time of her fans. ~ Adam Greenberg