Fifth Harmony's third full-length album and first since the departure of vocalist
Camila Cabello, 2017's
Fifth Harmony is a sophisticated, if somewhat undistinguished production that finds the former X-Factor contestants completing the transformation from a youthful pop outfit into a mature, adult contemporary R&B entity. It's a transformation the group already began on 2016's
7/27 and they're aided here by a bevy of producers including
Skrillex,
Poo Bear, Ammo,
DallasK, the Monsters & Strangerz, and others. After the release
7/27,
Cabello decided to go solo, leaving vocalists Ally Brooke, Normani Kordei,
Lauren Jauregui, and Dinah Jane to figure out how to move forward. Rather than replace
Cabello, they simply decided to be a four-piece. The result is an album that picks up on the slick, electronic vibe of
7/27 with a focus on songs for grown-ups and not the teens they initially appealed to. Certainly, it's a logical course of action -- teenagers grow up right alongside their idols, so it behooves any savvy pop act to try and reach that maturing audience. Here we get a batch of radio-ready cuts that touch upon such notions as female sexual empowerment ("Make You Mad"), cheating ("Lonely Night"), and the complexities of the female id ("Messy"). All are themes the group have explored in the past, usually with an eye-winking dash of
Beyonce-style feminist swagger. Here, however, they are more often delivered with a cool detachment that feels less personal than on past albums. Nonetheless, these songs fit nicely next to tracks by such similarly minded acts as
Rihanna,
Tinashe, and
SZA. Unfortunately, whether it's the absence of
Cabello (doubtful), or a problem with the handful of writer/producers, overall, the album lacks the cheeky fun of past singles like "Bo$$" and "Work from Home." Nonetheless,
Fifth Harmony still deliver a handful of sultry, passion-filled jams like the snappy "Down," featuring rapper
Gucci Mane, the party anthem "Sauced Up," and the sensual, '90s-style R&B anthem "Deliver." While
Fifth Harmony aren't as cutting edge as some of their contemporaries like
Solange or
Janelle Monae, or even
Beyonce for that matter, they do make a pleasingly reliable, throwback style of R&B, drawing heavily upon the '90s vibe of acts like
TLC,
Toni Braxton, and
En Vogue. One could easily imagine hearing these songs at a store and bopping along as you shop. However, where their '90s idols oozed personality and hooks that defined an era, on their album,
Fifth Harmony often just sound fine. [A clean version of
Fifth Harmony was also released.] ~ Matt Collar