LP1
Download links and information about LP1 by FKA Twigs. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 40:46 minutes.
Artist: | FKA Twigs |
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Release date: | 2014 |
Genre: | Electronica, Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock, Dancefloor, Dance Pop, Alternative |
Tracks: | 10 |
Duration: | 40:46 |
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Buy on iTunes $9.99 | |
Buy on Amazon $9.49 | |
Buy on iTunes $9.99 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Preface | 1:46 |
2. | Lights On | 4:24 |
3. | Two Weeks | 4:07 |
4. | Hours | 4:35 |
5. | Pendulum | 4:58 |
6. | Video Girl | 3:47 |
7. | Numbers | 3:43 |
8. | Closer | 3:45 |
9. | Give Up | 4:17 |
10. | Kicks | 5:24 |
Details
[Edit]FKA Twigs' early EPs were such jewel-like statements of purpose, delivering songs full of sensuality and heartache so economically, that an album almost seemed superfluous. None of these songs appear on the simply titled LP 1, a bold move that extends to the rest of the album. Tahliah Barnett opens up her sound by working with a host of producers: along with previous collaborator Arca, indie darlings Paul Epworth and Dev Hynes contribute their sound-shaping skills, along with Emile Haynie, whose contributions to Eminem's Recovery earned him a Grammy. They help give LP 1 a lusher sound that's more accessible, and more overtly R&B, than FKA Twigs' earlier work but maintains its ethereal sensuality. It's an approach that shines on the lead single "Two Weeks": the flipside of songs like "Papi Pacify" and "Water Me," where pain was suffused and eclipsed desire, it finds Barnett powerfully in control of her sexuality, rooting out doubt and infidelity over the verses' underwater beats and soaring on the ecstatic choruses. The album's other singles are just as charged. The Epworth-produced "Pendulum" amplifies FKA Twigs' bittersweet side beautifully, and when Barnett sings "I dance feelings like they're spoken," it's as intimate as the more overtly autobiographical and anguished "Video Girl," a nod to her time dancing in clips for songs by Ed Sheeran and Jessie J. Here and elsewhere on LP 1, she excels at broadening her emotional palette as well as her musical one. She glides from the album's lows to its highs, juxtaposing pitch-black tracks like "Numbers," where chopped-up breaths, beats, and horror movie strings channel panic, loss, and anger, with radiant ones like "Closer," the poppiest FKA Twigs song yet (and one that Barnett produced herself). Elsewhere, the spacious, moody "Kicks" and "Lights On" evoke the EPs without rehashing them, emphasizing the album's seamless transition to a grander scope. FKA Twigs' music was already so fully realized that LP 1 can't really be called Barnett coming into her own; rather, her music has been tended to since the "Water Me" days, and now it's flourishing.