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EP2
Barnes and Noble
EP2
Current price: $22.99


Barnes and Noble
EP2
Current price: $22.99
Size: OS
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EP2
is technically the first release
Tahliah Barnett
issued as
FKA Twigs
-- she changed it from her nickname Twigs after learning of another artist using that moniker -- but it's still another set of haunting, evocative songs. Where much of
EP1
was spare and whispery, its successor is downright lush. Acclaimed producer
Arca
(who also collaborated with
Kanye West
on
Yeezus
) helps
Barnett
build on the budding fullness of
songs like "Breathe," and the the richer sonics enhance
's air of mystery.
' kinship with trip-hop is alive and well -- echoes of
Tricky
,
Portishead
, and
Massive Attack
, as well as more contemporary acts like
Burial
and
the xx
, resonate through all of these songs -- but
's version is more nimble and abstract. Her beats are as decorative and expressive as they are rhythmic, punctuating and embellishing
's emotional complexity. Unlike so many of the artists who followed in the footsteps of trip-hop's pioneers and smoothed the style into attractive surfaces,
leaves it shattered and frayed. Even on "Ultraviolet," the closest
comes to being merely pretty, a woozy sub-bass cuts through the track's delicacy with an ominous depth. If
's music is denser than it was before, her lyrics are even more revealing, and the EP is at its most riveting when she lays her emotions bare. The aching that suffuses her music comes to the fore on "Papi Pacify," which teeters between pleading and demanding, and "Water Me," a strikingly sad, and beautiful, tangle of rejection and self-reliance.
still only has a handful of songs to her name, yet the way she brings together vast spaces and dense sounds, as well as love and pain, makes it a stunning body of work. ~ Heather Phares
is technically the first release
Tahliah Barnett
issued as
FKA Twigs
-- she changed it from her nickname Twigs after learning of another artist using that moniker -- but it's still another set of haunting, evocative songs. Where much of
EP1
was spare and whispery, its successor is downright lush. Acclaimed producer
Arca
(who also collaborated with
Kanye West
on
Yeezus
) helps
Barnett
build on the budding fullness of
songs like "Breathe," and the the richer sonics enhance
's air of mystery.
' kinship with trip-hop is alive and well -- echoes of
Tricky
,
Portishead
, and
Massive Attack
, as well as more contemporary acts like
Burial
and
the xx
, resonate through all of these songs -- but
's version is more nimble and abstract. Her beats are as decorative and expressive as they are rhythmic, punctuating and embellishing
's emotional complexity. Unlike so many of the artists who followed in the footsteps of trip-hop's pioneers and smoothed the style into attractive surfaces,
leaves it shattered and frayed. Even on "Ultraviolet," the closest
comes to being merely pretty, a woozy sub-bass cuts through the track's delicacy with an ominous depth. If
's music is denser than it was before, her lyrics are even more revealing, and the EP is at its most riveting when she lays her emotions bare. The aching that suffuses her music comes to the fore on "Papi Pacify," which teeters between pleading and demanding, and "Water Me," a strikingly sad, and beautiful, tangle of rejection and self-reliance.
still only has a handful of songs to her name, yet the way she brings together vast spaces and dense sounds, as well as love and pain, makes it a stunning body of work. ~ Heather Phares