Album: Tones and I - Welcome to the Madhouse | reviews, news & interviews
Album: Tones and I - Welcome to the Madhouse
Album: Tones and I - Welcome to the Madhouse
Debut full album from Australian hit-maker is heartfelt and jovially characterful
This writer has often pleaded to move away from vocal homogeny in pop. The current value placed on technical skill and hackneyed vulnerability-signifying has become a bore. It’s limiting that Chris Martin-meets-Ed Sheeran or Beyoncé-meets-Whitney Houston are primary templates.
Debut album Welcome to the Madhouse will be a test-case for Watson. In 2019 she had one of the year’s biggest hits in “Dance Monkey” but a triumphant global tour was cut short by COVID before she could reach Europe. A star in her home country, the commercial impact of this album, which she wrote alone and co-produced, will indicate if she’s more than that.
Tones and I’s music is pared back by contemporary chart standards, as if the songs had been written straightforwardly, often utilizing a doo-wop template, then backed with sparse, usually jaunty, finger-clicking, unadorned electronic production. The lyrics, however, reveal someone fighting their corner, bullishly so on “Westside Lobby” which bemoans negative attention and/or fawning since her success, opening “I’m sick of people telling me I’m special/And I’m so sick of people telling me I’m kind/And I know they’re not really being honest/Because, honestly, I’m not that fucking nice.”
Coming on like a Meghan Trainor channelling Lily Allen, songs such as “Just a Mess” and “Lonely” sing of not fitting in, and the music throughout occasionally becomes gospel-tinged, as if to take flight against such woes, notably on “Sad Songs”, although subject matter also ranges into the party zone (such as on “No Sleep”) and other areas. There’s a mid-album slump but things pick up with a hit contender in the big brassy upbeat soul-pop of “Cloudy Day”, which is followed by the sassy, jazzy “You Don’t Know My Name”. Closer “Bars (RIP T)”, a eulogy for a friend, suggests that Tones and I should spice future material with more hip hop. It concludes a likeable album of personality, heart and jovial gobbiness.
Below: Watch the video for "Won't Sleep" by Tones and I
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