The solo debut from
Black Box Recorder chanteuse
Sarah Nixey takes up the extroverted electronic pop trajectory signaled by that beloved band's (evidently) final album,
Passionoia, and ventures a good deal further in that direction, emerging as a full-fledged collection of stylish 21st century dance-pop in the vein of
Goldfrapp,
Dot Allison, and
Róisín Murphy. Characteristically, the emphasis is less on "pop" and "dance" than on "style," but
Nixey and her collaborators (chief among them
James Banbury, a former
Auteur and member of the downtempo/IDM outfit
InfantJoy) never let setting the right mood interfere with a good hook or a groove -- in any event, the album is both impossibly glamorous and immensely pleasurable to listen to. It's divided between dancefloor-ready tracks -- the sensational candy-disco single "Strangelove," the similar, slinkier "Beautiful Oblivion," the genially funky "Nothing on Earth," which could easily pass for latter-day
Kylie Minogue tune -- and more downtempo, slightly trip-hop-inflected material both dark ("Masquerade") and sweet (the electro-romance "When I'm Here with You") and usually somewhere in between -- a split which is roughly mapped by the album's two titular halves, each of which has its own spoken preface. Lyrically,
Nixey reveals herself to be a good deal more romantic and empathetic than her
Black Box Recorder ghostwriters
Luke Haines and
John Moore, although she still has a touch of their black-humored bite and a similar preoccupation with the dark, twisted aspects of human relationships. Somehow, knowing that
Nixey herself is the brain, and not just the lips, behind these lovelorn tales helps to take the edge out of her stiffly proper English enunciation, and in conjunction with a less chilly delivery and the lush, shimmering electronic warmth of the productions, makes
Sing, Memory far more likely to melt your heart than leave it shivering. ~ K. Ross Hoffman