James Blake & The Return of Harmony

Published: Oct. 12, 2021, 9 a.m.

For a decade James Blake has crafted an idiosyncratic sound. His early work as a minimalist electronic producer fused lush R&B chords with lyrical collage and unfiltered synthesizers. He describes his hit 2013 song \u201cRetrograde\u201d as apocalyptic yet also romantic. This single was in stark contrast to the bubblegum pop of the early 2010s. But other artists recruited him to spread his subversive sonics. He produced on three of the most seminal albums in recent history:\xa0Beyonc\xe9\u2019s Lemonade, Kendrick Lamar\u2019s DAMN and Frank Ocean\u2019s Blonde. Before Blake, it sounded like pop was caught in the same four chord loop. But gradually Blake\u2019s vision of harmonic melancholy has infused popular music. On his new album \u201cFriends That Break Your Heart,\u201d Blake has written his most compelling songs yet, but underneath are those his familiar wandering chords and emotional suspense.\nLearn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices