eMusic Review 0
Jazmine Sullivan has the sort of brassy, big-drama voice that has defined a specific kind of pro-woman, pro-love R&B for years. Her voice has grain and bluster, and she can pull back and reveal complexities in tone and meter. But Fearless, despite this, is not a pro forma throwback R&B album. It is also not a "contemporary" R&B album. There are few club cuts, and while it is danceable, it probably wouldn't fit in with, say, Trey Songz on a playlist. Instead, Sullivan, a songwriter who has written for several less-gifted vocalists, has created a unique album that neither bridges generational gaps nor moves the genre to the future. She teeters in fascinating ways — the single "Need U Bad," which features her mentor Missy Elliott (a useful, indicative co-sign), utilizes samples from Nicolas Taylor Stanton's "Higher Meditation Riddim Version" and Tapper Zukie's "Papa Big Shirt," two rocksteady gems, to impressive effect. The mellifluous "Lions, Tigers, Bears" features an arrangement more appropriate for the New York City Ballet Company than a quiet storm chanteuse. And "Bust Your Windows," the tenaciously sexy ballad of scorn that has become Sullivan's trademark song, has a distinctly Broadway appeal — its movements are as… read more »