Hilary Duff: luck… or something Album Review
Fortunately, each Duff and Koma have moved on from the thumping theatrics of the mid-2010s. luck… is much less Zedd and extra Carly Rae Jepsenone other former Koma collaborator, whose vibrant, princess-y vocal tone resembles Duff’s. The album’s base notes are chirpy synths and strummy acoustic pop, embellished with gated drum fills and swoopy strings—softer, pliable sounds that provide a extra pure basis for Duff. Still, her voice is a limiting issue right here: She lacks fluidity and vary, usually seeming to sing particular person notes reasonably than full phrases. This is particularly detrimental when her lyrics already really feel pressured, like on “You From the Honeymoon,” the place she parrots Tinashe whereas trying again on younger love: “Your kinda freak matched my kinda freak.” The phrases sound like magnetic fridge poetry—jumbled and overseas in her mouth.
This is the primary of her albums on which Duff is a credited co-writer on each track, and he or she appears to nonetheless be discovering her footing as a lyricist. She auditions totally different voices: At occasions she’s a painstaking wordsmith (the album’s opening traces rhyme “apologist” with “psychologist”); at others she’s a gal pal tossing off a bitchy textual content about her husband (“Future Tripping”) or fretting over an obvious rift along with her sister (“We Don’t Talk”). There are clunkers (“You calling me batshit’s the fastest antibiotic/For thinking you’re different this time”). There are inscrutable metaphors (I’m nonetheless undecided what the holey T-shirt in “Adult Size Medium” is all about). There is even, inexplicably, a whole refrain cribbed from a blink-182 track.
But there are additionally moments of bracing readability—little reminders of how relatable pop stars received to be so widespread within the first place. Despite its sparkly guitar and rhapsodic tone, “Tell Me That Won’t Happen” is streaked with existential dread; its hook, “I’m worried that I’ve felt everything I’ll ever feel,” is about as pithy an expression of the fear of getting older as I’ve heard. On “Roommates,” Duff pre-empts potential humiliation with humor: “We would laugh,” she sings to her companion, emphasis on weif she tried to mild a spark by “walking in something sexy.” It’s a joke, besides it isn’t. There’s something very important and deeply human on this vignette. Who hasn’t felt undesirable? Who hasn’t feared rejection? The rub, in fact, is that Duff is gorgeous, charming, profitable, and fascinating by any measure. This is the relatable pop star’s trick: displaying ourselves in a rose-colored mirror.
Things get extra attention-grabbing when the mirrors multiply. We see ourselves in Duff; Duff sees herself in one other lady on “Mature,” luck…‘s excessive mark. It’s about recognizing your self not as a person however as a demographic—on this case, the kind of younger, blonde lady that an older man often dates. Those conversant in Duff’s biography could plot among the coordinates right here: Beginning when she was 16, Duff was in a long-term relationship with a musician almost a decadent her senior. She has demurred on the specifics, however the contours of the story are acquainted all the identical, given the post-#MeToo reckoning that is prompted many ladies to reassess their age-gap relationships. “If you can still be considered ‘mature for your age,’ you are not an older person’s equal,” Tavi Gevinson wrote in a poignant 2021 essay on the topic. “This observation can easily go from an act of respect to license for harm.”
Nostalgia could be a balm, however it will also be a smoke machine, obscuring that which is tough to revisit. To her credit score, Duff does not let it overtake the narrative. While album nearer “Adult Size Medium” has the hallmarks of a triumphant retrospective—it is cavernous, sweeping in scope and sound, with callbacks to the golden days of youth and the blur of years passed by—it is largely simply uncooked materials. The bridge is a literal guidelines: “Try-hards, icons, Sunday mornings, Super Bowls, turn ons, tampons, edibles, and booty calls.” Duff does not attempt to mildew it right into a legacy. She truly sounds fairly ambivalent: “I remember it all/And I remember nothing.” Life has highs and lows, however largely it has middles that we largely overlook. At what needs to be her curtain name, Duff admits that she’s nonetheless making an attempt to recollect her traces. Who can relate?
