“LA Hallucinations” marries mall-pop and cloud-rap, with a jerky call-and-response keyboard figure that gives way to Jepsen’s oblique references to finding oblivion in intoxication: “There’s a little black hole in my golden cup/So you pour and I’ll say stop.” The hook’s ability to cut through the glitching, faded instrumentation almost makes up for the questionably dorky breakdown that name-checks Buzzfeed and TMZ. The M83-indebted “Run Away with Me” announces the album with a heavily reverberated sax overture, setting the album’s sonic agenda: ‘80s-style bombast, liberal vocal multi-tracking, and busy arrangements that pair rubbery, percussive synths with enveloping, formless pedal tones. Sharing an agent with Justin Bieber didn’t help her cause.īut after word broke that Jepsen’s follow-up, Emotion, would feature co-writes from hipster hitmakers (Blood Orange’s Dev Hynes, Vampire Weekend’s Rostam Batmanglij, and Sia Furler) and respected super-producers (Ariel Rechtshaid and Shellback, among others), it became evident that Jepsen, to quote her agent in a recent New York Times piece, “wanted to stop worrying about singles and focus on having a critically acclaimed album.”Įmotion is further proof that Jepsen is capable of translating broadly understood emotions and experiences into unshakable earworms. In fact, perhaps the crush seemed too youthful, as many felt that Jepsen was pandering to the Disney Channel crowd with calculated bubblegum pop. Unanimously adored by critics and consumers alike, Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Call Me Maybe” was a come-on song for the ages, done up in ebullient strings and deft guitar figures that capture the bottled-up optimism and anxious anticipation of a youthful crush.
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