Current:Home > InvestMusic Review: An uninhibited Gracie Abrams finds energy in the chaos on ‘The Secret of Us’ -Capitatum
Music Review: An uninhibited Gracie Abrams finds energy in the chaos on ‘The Secret of Us’
Ethermac View
Date:2025-04-06 01:29:27
Singer-songwriter Gracie Abrams succumbs to a crush on “Risk,” the lead single of her frantic and melancholic sophomore album, “The Secret of Us.”
“Heard the risk is drowning / But I’m gonna take it,” she sings atop fast acoustic guitar, her vocals growing more frenetic as the production thickens. “Watch this be the wrong thing,” she exclaims in the chorus.
The track reveals an evolved, but familiar, Abrams. The 24-year-old singer-songwriter has let us into her diary before, but “The Secret of Us” is more intimate and less reserved than her previous work. This time, her songs aren’t recollections of waning heartbreak, long held insecurity or lingering guilt. They’re happening in real time, developing and dissipating on record.
That immersion is achieved through the album’s production, a collaboration between Abrams, her longtime collaborator Aaron Dessner and co-writer Audrey Hobert, with cameos from Taylor Swift and producer Jack Antonoff.
The great “Blowing Smoke” sets a biting critique of a lost flame to acoustic guitar and hums that are traded for electric instruments and shouts, as Abrams’ quips lean into frustration.
She belts on “Let it Happen,” where “Tough Love” starts with whispers on a train to Boston and ends with a euphoric drum beat and declaration of self-love: “I know now what I’m leaving for.”
Bonus track “Close to You,” produced by Sam de Jong and reworked after a clip of it went viral, lives more in the magnetic world of Lorde and Ellie Goulding’s 2010s hits than it does in Abrams’ own — but showcases a pop persona that peeks through on “The Secret of Us.”
The urgent melodies and breathless bridges on this confident album are progressed from Abrams’ past work — when her writerly, soft-sung, “sad girl” pop music was much more wistful and anxious.
The tracks that exemplify her new personality most clearly — “Risk,” “Blowing Smoke,” “us. (feat. Taylor Swift)” — are the album’s most interesting. It’s a shift that Abrams has linked to the period of growth between her last project and this one. That year and a half included a Grammy nomination and extensive touring on her own and opening for Swift.
The album’s sparkling centerpiece is “us. (feat. Taylor Swift).” Their voices weave together, harmonizing the album’s title atop a dreamy acoustic track produced by the duo, Dessner and Antonoff: “I felt it, you held it, do you miss us, us? / Wonder if you regret the secret of us,” they sing, with Abrams leading.
The feature from Swift feels like a stamp of approval for Abrams. And while references to annotated sonnets and Robert Bly could place this track within Swift’s “The Tortured Poets Department,” it is recognizably Abrams in its youthful and thoughtful angst — as well as those private reflections on unrequited love.
“The Secret of Us,” paints a picture of an artist in motion, one who is discovering what excites her creatively as she navigates young adulthood. And by taking listeners along for that ride — the frustrations, vanities, chaotic crushes and all — she opens an exciting door for her future as an assured and energetic performer.
___
AP music reviews: https://apnews.com/hub/music-reviews
veryGood! (93995)
Related
- Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
- Heavily armed man with explosives found dead at Colorado amusement park prompting weekend search
- Actor Robert De Niro tells a jury in a lawsuit by his ex-assistant: ‘This is all nonsense’
- Matthew Perry's family releases statement thanking fans following star's death
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- Breast cancer survivor pushes for earlier screening as younger women face rising cases: What if I had waited?
- 'Bun in the oven' is an ancient pregnancy metaphor. This historian says it has to go
- NFL Week 8 winners, losers: Gruesome game for stumbling Giants
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- 'I am Kenough': Barbie unveils new doll inspired by Ryan Gosling's character
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Black community says highway project caused major flooding, threatening their homes
- Iranian teen Armita Geravand, allegedly assaulted by police for flouting strict dress code, has died
- Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc & David Schwimmer Mourn Matthew Perry's Death
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- A trial of New Zealand tourism operators in the volcanic eruption that killed 22 people ends
- A gunman holed up at a Japanese post office may be linked to an earlier shooting in a hospital
- Haiti bans charter flights to Nicaragua in blow to migrants fleeing poverty and violence
Recommendation
New data highlights 'achievement gap' for students in the US
Watchdog group says attack that killed videographer ‘explicitly targeted’ Lebanon journalists
Tarantula crossing the road blamed for crash that sent a Canadian motorcyclist to the hospital
NY man arrested after allegedly pointing gun at head of 6-year-old dropping off candy
EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
Army said Maine shooter should not have gun, requested welfare check
Iranian teen Armita Geravand, allegedly assaulted by police for flouting strict dress code, has died
Spending passes $17M in Pennsylvania high court campaign as billionaires, unions and lawyers dig in