K-pop girl group BLACKPINK perfect trap-pop on their first full-length studio record “The Album,” Associated Press critic Cristina Jaleru writes
By
CRISTINA JALERU Associated Press
October 2, 2020, 4:00 AM
• 2 min read
BLACKPINK, “The Album” (YG Entertainment/Interscope)
It takes a special kind of swagger to name your first full-length studio record “The Album,” but this is the kind of stuff artists like BLACKPINK are made of: voice, hair, moves and steel.
Four years since their incredible debut with the earworm singles, “Whistle” and “Boombayah," the foursome recorded an album during the pandemic, and the result is epic.
The eight-track record might not be as long as fans might want, but it’s got everything they’d wish for: trappy pop, sassy raps, offbeat instrumental interludes and some spectacular collaborations with Selena Gomez and Cardi B. Overall a musically cohesive work, the album kicks off with the high octane first single “How You Like That." The song goes full fanfare, with bells, whistles and everything in-between for a head-spinning dance bop. Second single “Ice Cream,” a collaboration with Gomez, is a bubblegum pop track with elements of trap, while the Cardi B-assisted “Bet You Wanna” has a simple beat enhanced by BLACKPINK's voices and Cardi’s rap flow.
The rest of the songs paint of a modern picture: choppy sequences, syncopated melodies on percussion and string and wind instruments. “Pretty Savage” introduces a prowling piano with some growls suggestive of a jungle, while “Crazy Over You” finds its rhythm in a Balkan whistle coupled with surf rock guitar sounds. “You Never Know,” a serious piano tune, closes the show.
Watch out! BLACKPINK in your area and they're here to stay.