Refresh

This website readdork.com/albums/james-bay-electric-light/ is currently offline. Cloudflare's Always Online™ shows a snapshot of this web page from the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. To check for the live version, click Refresh.

DORK RADIO  |  NOW PLAYING:   Loading...

James Bay – Electric Light

No review score found
Artists: James Bay
Label:
Released:
Rating:

James Bay - Electric Light


An album that spotlights raw, physical emotions with confidence.

Label: Republic Records
Released: 18th May 2018
Rating: ★★★★

It’s the spring of 2015, a Hertfordshire lad in a fedora, armed with a guitar, debuts at Number One with ‘Chaos And The Calm’, a record that showcases what was to become a signature brand of saccharine, soul-driven pop.

Three years on, and James Bay is about to drop a second record set to completely transform his already powerful position. He’s binned that goddamn hat, donned a short, messy quiff and armed himself confidently in sparkles a la pop-defining legend, Prince.

If ‘Chaos And The Calm’ was love, ‘Electric Light’ is sex. It’s not a messy one night stand, though; you’d be a fool to think Bay was going to completely lose his romanticism.

While his debut was a compilation of passionate acoustic works, Bay 2.0 flaunts electronic R&B, spacey synth and chunky alt-pop guitar riffs fit for arena sell-outs. These tracks are interspersed with the sound that made him so popular in the first place, and rightly so. A dash of piano, bluesy guitar lines and gospel backings (‘Us’, ‘Just For Tonight’, ‘Slide’), ‘Electric Light’ is versatile artistry, tackling a common theme which is so often ignored of its complexities within pop music.

Stand-outs come in the form of single ‘Pink Lemonade’ – an 80s-style extravaganza of transistor guitars and sleek surf-rocky pop – and opener ‘Wasted On Each Other’, a sexy, beat-thudding, riff-driven cut boasting Bay’s impressive falsetto. Bay follows the recent trend for electronic downtempo R&B with the intimate ‘Wild Love’ and the hip-swinging jazz sonics of ‘I Found You’.

His vocal is still rip-roaring, and complements more progressive instrumentation. Warped synth sounds scatter the record – on ‘Sugar Drunk High’, which sounds exactly as you think it will – and on the sweet funk jam of ‘Fade Out’, showcasing the reality of relationships in the digital age. Bay’s part-reinvention clearly has an appetite for being red-hot contemporary, if that means going all-out Daft Punk with the use of a vocoder (’Stand Up’).

This is an album that spotlights raw, physical emotions with confidence, in turn diminishing Bay’s original heart-on-my-sleeve sensibility. In a modern world of exhaustingly complicated relationships, ‘Electric Light’ is a little less serious, and a little more hedonist fun. Alice Mortimer

Discover the future of pop nonsense.

Say hello to Dork+, your AAA-backstage pass to the buzziest, most exciting music on the planet.

Get early access and exclusive features, sneak peeks behind the scenes, and the power to follow the artists you love as you curate your own personal music magazine. Plus, dive into our endless archive of back issues and never miss a beat.

Join DORK+ Join DORK+
Join DORK+