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House of Balloons
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House of Balloons
Current price: $12.59
Barnes and Noble
House of Balloons
Current price: $12.59
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Size: CD
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Taken as mood music designed for toxic and illicit late-night situations,
House of Balloons
-- the debut from Toronto vocalist
Abel Tesfaye
, released as a free download on his Tumblr blog -- can make for absorptive listening. Joined by producers
Doc McKinney
and
Illangelo
,
Zodiac
, and
Rainer
Tesfaye
-- to lift a phrase from
David Toop
-- exemplifies the combination of "sugar and poison" that has powered R&B throughout its evolution.
's voice is a gentle, bruised, and occasionally gorgeous-sounding instrument that, through sound and words, mixes based belligerence with palpable inner turmoil. "Let me see that ass, look at all this cash" and "I got my heart right here, I got my scars right here," both from "Wicked Games," sum up the angle. The unrelenting stream of dramatically delivered lyrics about getting high and laid can be draining. If
didn't punctuate so many thoughts with "fuck" and "motherfuckin'," or struggle with completing couplets -- as he does most glaringly with "I'm on that shit you can't smell, baby/So put down your perfume" -- it wouldn't be a problem. Also, there are instances where it seems likely that
does not have Urban Dictionary bookmarked, like when he says he'll "knock your boots off" (an apparent mix of knocking boots and knock your socks off) and brags that he's "always on that okey-dokey" (unless he's proud of being a gullible doormat). Still,
and his producers are often ideal foils for one another. The numb, dragged-out melodies and ice-cold drums in "High for This," and the swaggering hook over a chiming lullaby backing in "The Party and the After Party" (one of few instances where
views a female as more than a mere conquest) are two of several highlights.
is no turning point in a field populated by dozens of elder space cadets and mood architects, from
Massive Attack
to
Spacek
Sa-Ra
. As a flawed first step from a young newcomer, however, it's impressive. ~ Andy Kellman
House of Balloons
-- the debut from Toronto vocalist
Abel Tesfaye
, released as a free download on his Tumblr blog -- can make for absorptive listening. Joined by producers
Doc McKinney
and
Illangelo
,
Zodiac
, and
Rainer
Tesfaye
-- to lift a phrase from
David Toop
-- exemplifies the combination of "sugar and poison" that has powered R&B throughout its evolution.
's voice is a gentle, bruised, and occasionally gorgeous-sounding instrument that, through sound and words, mixes based belligerence with palpable inner turmoil. "Let me see that ass, look at all this cash" and "I got my heart right here, I got my scars right here," both from "Wicked Games," sum up the angle. The unrelenting stream of dramatically delivered lyrics about getting high and laid can be draining. If
didn't punctuate so many thoughts with "fuck" and "motherfuckin'," or struggle with completing couplets -- as he does most glaringly with "I'm on that shit you can't smell, baby/So put down your perfume" -- it wouldn't be a problem. Also, there are instances where it seems likely that
does not have Urban Dictionary bookmarked, like when he says he'll "knock your boots off" (an apparent mix of knocking boots and knock your socks off) and brags that he's "always on that okey-dokey" (unless he's proud of being a gullible doormat). Still,
and his producers are often ideal foils for one another. The numb, dragged-out melodies and ice-cold drums in "High for This," and the swaggering hook over a chiming lullaby backing in "The Party and the After Party" (one of few instances where
views a female as more than a mere conquest) are two of several highlights.
is no turning point in a field populated by dozens of elder space cadets and mood architects, from
Massive Attack
to
Spacek
Sa-Ra
. As a flawed first step from a young newcomer, however, it's impressive. ~ Andy Kellman