‘Fortune’ Chris Brown
There are a few moments on Chris Browns new album, Fortune, that the harshest critics of the 23-year-old singer might describe as unfortunate. On the pulsating dance monster Bassline, Browns innocuous brag that I got bottles is tainted by the June nightclub incident in which Brown and rapper Drake allegedly hurled champagne bottles at each other in a fight over superstar Rihanna. Both Dont Judge Me and Stuck on Stupid are sweet love songs that hark back to the singers seemingly long-ago years as a teen idol, but the titles may elicit snorts from those familiar with his history of bad acts (a 2009 assault on then-girlfriend Rihanna chief among them).
But most people taking the time to listen to Fortune are probably not interested in criticizing Brown.
That the world seems divided into three camps when it comes to Brown – those who will always hate everything he does, those who will always love everything he does, and those who have no idea who he is or what he does – frees him to do pretty much whatever he wants creatively.
That position is what allowed him to produce 2011s game-changer, F.A.M.E, where he ditched the no-longer-appropriate puppy-love songs and debuted edgier dance tracks and more mature R&B ballads. Fortune is no F.A.M.E – it sounds like it, sure, but doesnt move Brown to any new ground musically.
The most daring track on the album is Till I Die, on which producer Danja wraps alternating synths around a thick R&B backbone, while guest rappers Wiz Khalifa and Big Sean dart in and out between Browns vocals. The rest of the album is more genre-compartmentalized.
Dance fans have already stamped Turn Up the Music a hit, and they may next turn their attention to Party Hard.
Brown has never been one to explore his inner or outer turmoil on record, but 4 Years Old seems to be the young singers Heaven, I Need a Hug. Brown doesnt directly address any of incidents he has been involved in on the vulnerable, stripped-down ballad, but he talks about having everything he wants, yet nothing he needs, and feeling like a kid again – rudderless but hopeful that things will work out when hes all grown up. Its a rare moment of Brown expressing anything other than confidence and self-assurance. Too bad the people he most needs to hear it probably never will.