Complex Simplicity

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Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 62:06

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Hua Hsu

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Hua Hsu edits the hip-hop section of URB Magazine and writes about music, culture and politics for Slate, the Village Voice, The Wire and various other magazine...more »

01.16.09
An overlooked instant classic from a firecracker too dangerous for the neo-soul set
2004 | Label: The Orchard

A little too dangerous for both the neo-soul set and commercial radio, Teedra Moses 'brilliant 2004 debut was one of those sad casualties of a fickle, vision-bereft industry; it is the kind of record that still earns new fans each year, many of them certain that it will one day be recognized as an overlooked 2000s soul classic.

Complex Simplicity is a shockingly self-assured debut — it is short on guests; there are no superstar producers, only Poli Paul (of "Dip it Low" fame) and Raphael Saadiq; and Moses asserts herself with a bewitching swagger. She's no dame in distress: "Listen daddy, I'm too cute to fight," she sweetly coos on the carnivalesque "You Better Tell Her," before warning: "You better get that bitch told tonight."

It is a remarkably versatile album, moving from the poppy efficiency of "Caution" to the earthquaking gospel of "I Think of You (Shirley's Song)" with ease. The trembling guitar and woozy, "Spottieottie"-like ambience of "No More Tears" perfectly complements Moses 'piercing, skyward pleas, while "You'll Never Find"— featuring a brutish, man-scorned verse by Jadakiss — is a massive piece of sweet chipmunk-soul. Best of all is "Be Your Girl," a proud-but-vulnerable strut alongside the sweetest 80s… read more »

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NOT NEO

soulstar247

You say that it was a little too dangerous for the neo soul set, well that's because it isn't neo, it's R&B. Yes agreed it does have some neo (new age) influences in there, e.g. Take Me, feat. Mr Saddiq. However, one track does not make a neo soul lp. I believe that it was the R&B family that found it difficult to digest and therefore ended up reclassifying it as neo in order to justify their rejection of what is a very good debut lp. I remember 'Be Your Girl' gained a lot of air play and MTV time and that's probably because it was seen as R&B and not neo. The bottom line, not everything without a pigeon hole needs to be thrown into the neo cupboard.

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They Say All Music Guide

The knock against neo-soul is that it looks desperately to the past instead of the present or future, having disconnected somewhere in the late ’70s, just before the wicked drum machines and synthesizers came around to siphon the soul out of R&B. Pop-oriented R&B is routinely faulted for being insincere and inauthentic, full of flash and bleating-goat ululations. New R&B artists in 2004 tended to be slotted into one of the two categories, either next to Jill Scott and “the next D’Angelo,” or next to Usher and “the next BeyoncĂ©.” Singer and songwriter Teedra Moses sees the good in both sides, realizing that there must be some people out there who are thrilled by modern-day hip-hop-minded productions but crave lyrical content that goes deeper than memorable hooks and identikit platitudes about desire, romantic drama, and soul-searching. Just as importantly, Moses and primary collaborator Paul Poli — who also teamed up to write and produce Christina Milian’s “Dip It Low,” an ill-suited reference for the sound of this album — draw from elements of the past that, save for some Bad Boy samples, have rarely fit into the framework of any R&B for the past several years. The two would be more likely to gush about Patrice Rushen’s “Remind Me” or Al B. Sure!’s “Nite and Day” than Innervisions or What’s Going On, and the spirit of their work can bring to mind the period when TLC and Mary J. Blige were coming of age. These references inform rather than define the songs. (To further determine the angle of the album, the two tracks not handled by Poli are produced by the best ambassadors of neo-soul and pop-rap/R&B imaginable — Raphael Saadiq and Lil Jon, respectively.) Moses has a voice that is light and innocent-sounding, offset by all the evidence that she has been through her share of experiences. She may lack the showmanship of her gold and platinum contemporaries, but she can coast on the details that take several listens to surface, like the way “And listen daddy I’m too cute to fight/You better get that bitch told tonight” is somehow the sweetest, catchiest line on the album, or how the title track flips the common “party your troubles away” theme by preceding the joyous chorus, amidst Paisley Park percussion hits, with “Daddy he wasn’t there/Momma she’s gone now/I gotta be grown/I need you to hold me down.” (How many songs turn you into a baller and a bawler at the same time?) This, Moses’ debut, is the best R&B album of 2004 — if not the best pop-oriented R&B album since CrazySexyCool. – Andy Kellman

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