Janet Jackson's Unbreakable: A Stylish Comeback
Unbreakable (2015) |
Album artist: Janet Jackson
Label: Rhythm Nation, BMG
Release date: October 2, 2015
Genre: Pop, R&B
Tracks: 17 (standard), 19 (Target, HMV and Australian standard edition)
Length: 64:37
I've been an avid listeners to Janet Jackson's music for a long time and it sure made me so excited the first time I heard Janet was making a new record. Even though the Unbreakable album was released on October last year, I guess it's not too late because the album surely has great statements not to miss.
Janet has gone from an independent to an icon. Her breakthrough album Control (1986) talks about the singer willingness to be independent and growing into adult an adult. Rhythm Nation (1990) saw Janet's growing social awareness and international stardom. Janet (1993) saw the singer as a more woman than a girl and was a career-defining moment. While, The Velvet Rope (1997) marked herself to be as equally as an iconic musician.
Although her 2001 album All for You could be said as an medium to celebrate herself as an icon, the last three albums until her Discipline album seemed to have a quite different direction to what Janet had been doing with the past albums. Some songs in the albums of Damita Jo, 20 Y.O. and Discipline were good but lacked of power of her songs used to have. The All for You album was too much about celebration and getting laid and the next three albums was even more. She started to change from a trend-setter into a trend-chaser. I couldn't even blame the Super Bowl incident for the low sales because those albums ever since were not so relevant to a Janet as we knew.
Seven years after the Discipline album, Miss Jackson is back and she's nastier and powerful than ever (nasty is not quite relevant). Her latest Unbreakable album brings what her fans have been waiting for, a Janet music which always make a way for itself and isn't necessarily desperate to go for the commercial reception. Janet is back with her long-time collaborator Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and I can say that this trio makes a supreme-level music, iconic as ever.
The lyrical content mainly focuses on love, healing, family, social issues and celebration. The album could be her most decent record in ages. She doesn't need to be nasty, cursing and getting far too explicit because she's already on top of her game. Jackson alongside Jam and Lewis are clearly back to the point where they show their willingness to experiment but maintaining what today's music buffs are wishing for. The music doesn't sound like trying too hard. Every song has different emotions to what she said that she's been missing her fans. The whole record is definitely about going back again and so it declares a new sound and a new style (anyway Janet is super cool these days especially the hair).
The album reflects what is her innermost persona but not necessarily being highlighted. Opened with the warm welcoming "Unbreakable" to the hard-to-say-goodbye "Gon' B Alright", Janet manages to express her need to start a "conversation" with her fans and tell her fans to get "No Sleeep". She projects her still-burning Rhythm Nation vibe with "Shoulda Known Better" which basically urges people to stay humble. Also, the critic-slamming song which just very relevant to her state of life, "The Great Forever". Not to miss those club-banging songs such as "Burnitup!" and "Dammn Baby" which are both relevant to today's music markets but still maintain the essence of classic Janet. The album is stylish and down to earth at the same time, a stylish comeback.
While commercially the album is not selling as many as a million in a day, the album shows confident and becomes her strongest record since The Velvet Rope. In the other hand, her strongest as a woman she is now. I absolutely can't wait for what Janet could bring us on her next records. Go Janet!
Rating: A
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