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Infinite Things
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Infinite Things
Current price: $17.99
Barnes and Noble
Infinite Things
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
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purportedly scrapped an entire album before reengineering the tracks on her own during the COVID-19 lockdown. The resulting album, 2020's
, is rife with so much heartfelt emotion -- not to mention big, hooky choruses -- that the choice seems to have been a good one. The record follows her ambitious, conceptually driven 2017 album
, which married slick pop production to songs about social upheaval, depression, and motherhood.
is very much a companion work, though one that feels less archly designed, and on the best tracks, it's grounded in relatable emotionality that feels born out of everyday struggles. This, even when the melody reaches for the sky, as on the soaring title track. Co-written by
with
of
and former
bassist
, the song is a buoyant anthem about the transformative connection between mother and child, and it sounds pleasantly like something
or
might have recorded in the 1980s. Other classic '80s and '90s sounds pop up throughout the album, as on the opening "Supernatural," with its icy
synths, and "Falling Down," with its soulful
-era
vibe.
always has a good sense for who to work with, and here we get an especially funky collaboration between her,
, and
on the electronic-tinged "Monster." That said, it's the spare, piano-driven songs that pack the most wallop, such as the shimmering
co-write "If This Is Goodbye" and the heartbreaking "If Loving You Was Easy," written with
. The latter song finds
ruminating on the mundanity and pain of long-term relationships, singing "Remember the days when no ocean could keep me away/The light shone all night and we still had so much left to say/Now we watch TV so we can fill up the space/That's building between us, it feels like you're slipping away." The song is as grandly delivered as anything on the album, but gains its potency from the simplicity and bittersweet sentiment at its core. You can find this sentiment all throughout
, that life is about the people we love. As she sings on the title track, "I see heaven in your eyes." ~ Matt Collar