A Strange Arrangement

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (577 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 34:50

eMusic Review

Avatar Image
Michaelangelo Matos

eMusic Contributor

Michaelangelo Matos is a former eMusic editor and one of its chief contributors, a staff critic for Resident Advisor, and he writes for Spin, Rolling Stone, Vil...more »

09.08.09
Mayer Hawthorne, A Strange Arrangement
2009 | Label: Stones Throw

There’s something studied about Mayer Hawthorne’s approach to ’60s-into-’70s soul — but that’s one reason it’s attractive. Where a latter-day old-style R&B unit such as the Dap-Kings, or a neo-soul vocalist like Jamie Lidell, often goes for power, Hawthorne opts to survey things and sidle in, modestly. There are times when he’s a little too modest: on the ballad "Shiny & New," a clear melodic nod to the Stylistics, his throaty falsetto can’t quite measure up to the suppleness of that group’s great girly lead, Russell Thompkins Jr. But for the most part, A Strange Arrangement works because of the way Hawthorne lets little details pile up. The matching flute and xylophone that take the song to the fade of the album’s title cut, or the on-the-beat guitar chank of the molten-sounding slow-dance "Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out," bespeak a lifetime of absorption in the sound of all kinds of vintage soul, and when Hawthorne sings in his natural tenor on "Maybe So, Maybe No" and "Let Me Know," he sounds authoritative on his own terms. And when he advises us to "get back up" in "The Ills," the swift, funky beat and dry horns— not to mention a lyrical… read more »

Write a Review32 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Jury's Out

MusicalOmnivore

Seems decent but not sold. dont think its as good as Eli Paperboy Reed and he's certainly no Darryl Hall. On the other hand not bad might grow on me.

user avatar

can't get enough

loveisvinyl

My wife found this album and she was spot on. Mayer really hits stardom with this album. But if you really want soul coming from a white guy(even though its not about race!) then check out Remy Shand. Shand was seriously underrated when he first hit the music scene. Sorry Mayer but you're still next in line to Remy.

user avatar

the biggest disappointment of the year

artAlexion

On a quality to hype ratio, this is probably one of the most overhyped albums on eMusic. Soulless soul. This guy sings like white people dance.

user avatar

smooth

dOM

great voice great tunes would love see this guy live, i like my music to push forward and take me some were new, this does none of that but this is so on the money i had to go back and listen to to stuff i'ant listen to for years

user avatar

another great recommendation eMusic

rubytn

listened to this after getting an eMusic recommendation. Great album, great voice, takes me back to the mellow 70's R $ B. Looking forward to more.

user avatar

Don't sleep on this

sixtwentysix

I think this has a chance to go under the radar but this is a really great, rough hewn R&B soul album. Maybe it's his clear inexperience with the nuances of the style but at the same time, it makes it sound fresh as R&B. Really great and catchy hooks and sweet, off kilter lyrics fly between parody and honesty. Great album. Keep the fire Mayer.

user avatar

Nice Neo Soul

SoulStranger

"Mayer Hawthorne"--actually producer Andrew Cohen--certainly knows his late 60s/early 70s soul. The best tracks here, like the Intruders-influenced "Maybe So Maybe No," really do sound like long-lost hits from that era. And yet something is missing. One problem is that these one-man productions sound like demos: as talented as Cohen is, neither his vocal or instrumental chops are quite in the same league as his inspirations. The other is that the whole thing sounds a bit studied--there's the Philly track, the Motown pastiche, the Curtis Mayfield track, etc. rather than songs that are uniquely Mayer Hawthorne. And fake surface noise, really? Still worth a download, though.

user avatar

backwards

megafonix

this is totally retro and a brilliant adaption of some of the usual suspects in pop and soul. Great songwriting and great arrangements!

user avatar

Color Review

SWOOL

Dark Brown, Dark Orange, Red with half a sprinkle of Neon Pink/Orange

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

Scene: Detroit Soul, 1960s and 1970s

By Hua Hsu

Few cities embody the complexities of the American narrative quite like Detroit. A little over 100 years ago, the city's stunning architecture and stately plazas prompted comparisons to Paris. Detroit became synonymous with the nation's rise in the 20th Century, thanks to Henry Ford and the area's emerging auto industry. During World War II, as factories shifted from making cars to anything the war effort required, the city became known as the "Arsenal of Democracy."… more »

Mayer Hawthorne

By Michaelangelo Matos

Mayer Hawthorne is something of an accidental soul singer. Born Andrew Cohen in Ann Arbor, MI, the 30-year-old Hawthorne began producing hip-hop in his late teens and eventually moved to L.A. with his "hip-hop-electro-soul" crew (as he himself put it), Now On. That's where he saw his future until a mutual friend, Nicole Skaggs, introduced him to Peanut Butter Wolf, the DJ and producer behind the Stones Throw label and trumpeted the two songs… more »

Activity