Album: Joss Stone, Colour Me Free! (EMI)

Andy Gill
Friday 06 November 2009 01:00 GMT
Comments

Delayed for a year by a label with whom she has fallen into dispute, Colour Me Free! represents a return to the retro-soul style of Joss Stone's debut following the ill-advised attempts to squeeze her into the R&B diva mould.

Fortunately for Joss, she's built a good working relationship with Conner Reeves, who co-writes many tracks and helps produce them: the single "Free Me" features her Miami funk sound, with itchy Little Beaver-style guitar licks and an electric sitar break, while the piano blues "4 and 20", with its organ shadings and shivering strings, recalls the Memphis funk of Willie Mitchell's classic Al Green hits. Jeff Beck reprises his "Superstition" wah-wah for "Parallel Lines", though he's equalled by the unnamed guitarist whose impeccably damped pizzicato chording and liquid lead fills dominate "Governmentalist", a complaint which Nas's guest rap suggests was aimed at a previous administration. Understated slap-bass carries Joss's emotive delivery of Candi Staton's hit "You Got The Love", and David Sanborn's waspish sax decorates her take on Ray Charles's "I Believe It To My Soul", but the most obvious indication of how comfortable she is with this regained blues-soul mode is the concluding "Mr Wankerman", a slow, brooding putdown which expands into a 14-minute jam.

Download this: Free Me; Parallel Lines; 4 and 20; Governmentalist; Mr Wankerman

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in