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Promise to Love
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Promise to Love
Current price: $16.99


Barnes and Noble
Promise to Love
Current price: $16.99
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Ronald Isley
's
This Song Is for You
, released in 2013, included "My Favorite Thing," a song written and co-produced by
Kem
. It seemed more like a
song featuring
Isley
, not the other way around, since
was not at the fore. The song reappears on
's fourth proper album, and it neatly falls into place, like it belonged here all along. It could also be inserted into any of
's previous albums with non-disruptive ease. That underscores
's consistency or, more skeptically, his penchant for doing the same thing over and over. As with the three albums that preceded it,
Promise to Love
consists almost entirely of smooth and quiet ballads that regard long-term devotion and self-improvement. He remains an antidote to prevailing contemporary R&B sounds. When he sings of going downtown, he means geographically, not anatomically -- and guest
Snoop Dogg
, on his best behavior, displays restraint. Even "Say Something Real," which bears a significant instrumental resemblance to
Prince
's "Soft and Wet," is free of innuendo. The backdrops, as usual, are unwaveringly silky, yet filled with nuances.
might do one thing, but he does that one thing very well. Four- and five-year waits aside, the man knows how to please his listeners. ~ Andy Kellman
's
This Song Is for You
, released in 2013, included "My Favorite Thing," a song written and co-produced by
Kem
. It seemed more like a
song featuring
Isley
, not the other way around, since
was not at the fore. The song reappears on
's fourth proper album, and it neatly falls into place, like it belonged here all along. It could also be inserted into any of
's previous albums with non-disruptive ease. That underscores
's consistency or, more skeptically, his penchant for doing the same thing over and over. As with the three albums that preceded it,
Promise to Love
consists almost entirely of smooth and quiet ballads that regard long-term devotion and self-improvement. He remains an antidote to prevailing contemporary R&B sounds. When he sings of going downtown, he means geographically, not anatomically -- and guest
Snoop Dogg
, on his best behavior, displays restraint. Even "Say Something Real," which bears a significant instrumental resemblance to
Prince
's "Soft and Wet," is free of innuendo. The backdrops, as usual, are unwaveringly silky, yet filled with nuances.
might do one thing, but he does that one thing very well. Four- and five-year waits aside, the man knows how to please his listeners. ~ Andy Kellman