Album Reviews

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Alicia Keys

Unplugged  Hear it Now

RS: 3of 5 Stars

2005

Play View Alicia Keys's page on Rhapsody

On her first live album, Alicia Keys plays around with her mannered retro arrangements and turns out seven previously unrecorded songs. Hits such as "Fallin' " groove easily with just a hint of indulgent operatics, and on "Heartburn" Keys exploits the catch in her voice for a punch-and-jab session with her crack band. The guests don't do much to remedy the album's duller moments: Keys calls on Common, Mos Def and Damian Marley for the closing "Love It or Leave It Alone/Welcome to Jamrock," which is sort of like trying to spice up a cocktail party by trotting out Noam Chomsky. Unplugged's clear high point, however, is "Unbreakable," a new original and one of the best Seventies-sitcom themes never written. Amid a megacatchy chorus, Keys invokes famous black couples before deciding her love is just fine, once again sounding older than her years and perfectly round-the-way.

CHRISTIAN HOARD

(Posted: Oct 20, 2005)

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