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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
Entertainment
Dan Deluca

Album reviews: Michael Kiwanuka, the Mavericks, and Blanco Brown

Michael Kiwanuka

"Kiwanuka"

(Polydor (ASTERISK)(ASTERISK)(ASTERISK) {)

With his third album, Ugandan-British songwriter Michael Kiwanuka has once again woven together a seamless song cycle that takes its sweet time in expressing hopes, fears, and doubts. Produced by frequent collaborators Danger Mouse and Inflo, "Kiwanuka" bathes the voice of the singer _ depicted as a Tudor king in Markeidric Walker's album cover painting _ in strings and lush atmospherics.

When the slowly unwinding "Cold, Cold Heart" from 2016's Love & Hate was used as intro music to the hit HBO series Big Little Lies, it brought the folk-soul singer a larger audience. Patient Kiwanuka tunes like "Hard to Say Goodbye" and "Light" employ a similar strategy, allowing the listener to luxuriate in the wonders of Kiwanuka's grainy voice, redolent of other genre-fluid soul men like Bill Withers and Terence Trent D'Arby.

But the music retains an anxious edge, as Kiwanuka navigates uncertainty and struggles with self-confidence on songs like "Living in Denial." "Hero" draws inspiration from the life of Black Panther Fred Hampton, slain 50 years ago this December; it's in part about police shootings, then and now, as well as the simple heroism of staying alive and present for those you love. Kiwanuka makes unhurried music that exists outside current trends. That's what makes it so valuable in the here and now. _ Dan DeLuca

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