The singer’s sensitive writing leaves some of her songs feeling tepid

Lianne La Havas is a 25-year-old London singer-songwriter with a big fan in Prince, who featured her on his album Art Official Age and last year performed a secret gig for a dozen people in her living room.
It’s easy to hear what caught his ear. La Havas’ voice, which has drawn comparisons to Sade and Alicia Keys, is relaxed but powerful, moving easily from languid sensuality to delicate yearning.
Blood, her second album, blends La Havas’ guitar-based folk influences with dollops of R&B and mellow, jazzy soul. There are strong hooks, big bubbling basslines, delicate keyboards and subdued horns on a record that opens with Unstoppable, a percolating anthem co-written by Adele collaborator Paul Epworth.
As Epworth’s participation suggests, this is a set of smoothly accomplished songs that includes the disco-tinged What You Don’t Do, funky ode to loneliness Tokyo and spare, subtle ballad Wonderful. The musical texture is rich and polished — so much so that the burst of rock distortion on Never Get Enough comes as a pleasant shock.
Lyrically, the songs are personal — Green & Gold reflects on the singer’s mixed Greek and Jamaican heritage — but restrained, touching on loneliness, heartbreak, aspiration and angst in a way that is thoughtful but unflaggingly polite. (“I’ve been unsatisfied lately when I think about us,” La Havas offers on Never Get Enough).
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