Duffy
Posted on 04/14/2008
There's a Dutch proverb that says when you're looking for ideas, it's
better to steal something good than come up with something bad
yourself. It could have been invented for Duffy.
Rockferry's
ten tracks wear their influences from the ‘Soul for Dummies' book
proudly, while offering little of Duffy herself beyond her much
acclaimed voice. This doesn't make
Rockferry a bad album, but after all the hype, you're left a little deflated.
I don't really need to tell you what
Rockferry sounds like, as
you've heard it all before. Take "Mercy," the big single. Bassline
borrowed from "Stand By Me." "Hanging On Too Long" 's silky strings and
guitar licks? "I Heard It Through the Grapevine." Both Duffy's takes on
these two classics are fine, as any song which leans on them would be.
As is the production, which draws heavily on Burt Bacharach's deft pop
touch and Phil Spector's wall of sound. But nothing on Rockferry
astonishes or leaves anything more memorable behind than its
influences, and that's the problem at the heart of the album. While we
should applaud Duffy for her taste and choosing to mine a richer seam
of music than most of her competitors, that doesn't mean we should
necessarily buy her record, pleasant as
Rockferry is.
If Duffy has a problem, it's the burden of greatness that has been
thrust upon her by the media and her marketing department before she's
got a record that can even begin to justify that claim. What she does
have is a voice strong enough to command your attention for the span of
the record, and that might get you up to dance (at your girl's
instigation) to a couple of tracks. And isn't that what pop music is
all about? For that's what Rockferry,
just like its noble forebears, undoubtedly is, and it shouldn't be
criticized for that. We'll just have to leave judging her claim to
greatness to posterity, and that's exactly as it should be.
- Will Georgi