Although Los Angeles singer/songwriter
Samantha James claims 1980s cocktail-pop singers
Sade and
Basia as two of her primary influences, her debut album,
Rise, sounds as if her true heart lies in that period in the mid-'90s when those singers' contemporaries
Everything But the Girl lost their taste for twee U.K. indie guitar pop and jazzy torch songs and transformed themselves into a downtempo electronica act. It was a transformation that worked surprisingly well, not least because
Tracey Thorn's smoky, wine-dark vocals and
Ben Watt's knack for languid minor-key melodies both suited the style unexpectedly well.
Samantha James is no
Tracey Thorn, and her songwriting and production partner
Sebastian Arocha Morton is no
Ben Watt, but albums like Walking Wounded are no embarrassment as musical touchstones, and
James doesn't embarrass herself in her re-creation of the style. The best songs, like the dreamy "Enchanted Life," the lushly tropical "Rain," and the bossa nova-influenced "I Found You," a duet with
Celso Fonseca, are those that leave the dancefloor in favor of those dark, intimate banquettes in the quiet corners, where
James' honeyed voice and the duo's fondness for mellow late-night atmospheres are best suited. On the more overtly dance-oriented tracks, like "Breathe You In" and "Living Without You,"
James sounds like just another anonymous dance club diva, and the '80s-throwback rhythm boxes don't help her cause. ~ Stewart Mason