Draft:Fabiana Palladino (album)

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Fabiana Palladino
Paul Institute
  • XL
  • Fabiana Palladino is the debut album by British pop musician Fabiana Palladino. The release was recorded over the course of multiple years[2] and has received positive reviews by critics.

    Critical reception

    According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Fabiana Palladino received "universal acclaim" based on a weighted average score of 88 out of 100 from five critic scores.[3] Editors at AllMusic rated this album 4.5 out of 5 stars, with critic Andy Kellman writing that this album "is one creatively askew pop-R&B delight after another, all voiced with captivating and confident flair by a razor-sharp songwriter", whom he compares to Prince.[4] Harry Thorfinn-George at The Arts Desk gave Fabiana Palladino 4 out of 5 stars, characterizing the work as "a strong debut album which serves as a formal introduction to an artist who has been on the side-lines for too long".[5] Editors at The Fader chose this among the best releases of the week, where Sandra Song called it "vulnerable, honest, and intimate... [with a] kind of raw human touch you'd expect from a D.I.Y. bedroom musician" in spite of "the sleek, hyper-produced grandeur of her '80s pop-R&B production".[6]

    In The Guardian, Alexis Petridis chose this as his album of the week, giving it 5 out of 5 stars and stated that "for all the knowing signifiers from the age of power-dressing and rolled-up suit sleeves... the album never feels like a retro exercise" and he considered it "devoid of weak tracks or ideas that don't gel, it's an album that sounds as if it was made by someone who knows exactly what she's doing"[7] That newspaper published a second review by Shaad D'Souza who compared this music to Janet Jackson and called it "a sharp debut that knows the power of patience and tension".[8] Sam Franzini at The Line of Best Fit rated Fabiana Palladino an 8 out of 10, characterizing it as "a near-effortless reinvention of retro pop, soul, funk, and R&B tracks with a glossy modern sheen, setting the stage for more grandiose statements in the future".[9]

    At musicOMH, Ben Devlin rated this work 4 out of 5 stars, stating that it was "surely... worth the wait" after Palladino released an intermittent series of singles for several years leading up to this album, which Devlin writes "takes inspiration from a grab bag of stars and styles, from R&B to disco, the results are sometimes charmingly retro and other times fresh and inventive".[10] Tony Stamp of Radio New Zealand ended his review of this release, "the main thing that’s drawn me back though is the resolve in her voice, and the way she crafts melodies that evoke the past, but manage to feel current".[11] This was Album of the Week at Stereogum, where critic Caleb Catlin cautioned listeners that "because of the production's intricately designed architecture, a listener might mistake this for a scholarly form of pop, as music that only the sophisticated avid listener can engage with" but continued that "she communicates directly, and the album is a lot punchier for it".[12] Grant Sharples at Uproxx included Fabiana Palladino as one of the best indie music albums of the week, writing that Palladino has "carved out her own style at the nexus of indie-pop and ’80s soul, adjusting her elastic voice to suit her own vision rather than someone else’s".[13]

    Track listing

    1. "Closer" – 3:35
    2. "Can You Look in the Mirror?" – 3:19
    3. "I Can't Dream Anymore" – 3:12
    4. "Give Me a Sign" – 3:18
    5. "I Care" – 4:18
    6. "Stay with Me Through the Night" – 3:36
    7. "Shoulda" – 4:29
    8. "Deeper" – 3:44
    9. "In the Fire" – 3:57
    10. "Forever" – 3:59

    Personnel

    • Fabiana Palladino – instrumentation, vocals, production
    • Harry Craze – production
    • Steve Ferrone – drums
    • string arrangement
    • Giancarla Palladino
    • Maz Palladino
    • Pino Palladino – bass guitar
    • Rocco Palladino
    • Jai Paul – on "I Care"
    • Jamie Woon – backing vocals

    See also

    References

    1. OCLC 226369741
      . Retrieved 7 April 2024.
    2. ^ Pedder, Alan (2 April 2024). "Fabiana Palladino: "I don't write my best songs in the depths of despair – I have to process things"". Interview. The Line of Best Fit. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
    3. Fandom, Inc.
      n.d. Retrieved 8 April 2024.
    4. ^ Kellman, Andy (n.d.). "Fabiana Palladino – Fabiana Palladino". AllMusic. RhythmOne. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    5. ^ Thorfinn-George, Harry (7 April 2024). "Album: Fabiana Palladino – Fabiana Palladino". Reviews, News, & Interviews. The Arts Desk. Retrieved 7 April 2024.
    6. ISSN 1533-5194
      . Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    7. . Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    8. . Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    9. ^ Franzini, Sam (5 April 2024). "Fabiana Palladino: Fabiana Palladino Review – sleekly self-assured". Album Reviews. The Line of Best Fit. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    10. ISSN 2516-6220
      . Retrieved 8 April 2024.
    11. ^ Tony, Stamp (27 April 2024). "Review: Fabiana Palladino by Fabiana Palladino". Music. Radio New Zealand. Retrieved 2 May 2024.
    12. ^ Catlin, Caleb (2 April 2024). "Album Of The Week: Fabiana Palladino Fabiana Palladino". Album Of The Week. Stereogum. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
    13. ^ Sharples, Grant (9 April 2024). "All The Best New Indie Music From This Week". Indie Mixtape. Uproxx. Retrieved 9 April 2024.

    External links

    Category:2024 debut albums Category:Fabiana Palladino albums Category:XL Recordings albums