Music Review: Lily Allen

It’s not easy to bounce back from a critical drubbing like the one Lily Allen took for her 2014 album Sheezus, whose bullish stance failed to convince.

Having  disowned that "identity crisis", her fourth record is a radical overhaul that gives her signature dancehall-flavoured pop a lighter, fresher, more streamlined sheen, Allen’s voice feather-light.

It’s a wise move for songs well suited to an era of heavy, tell-all memoir.

The hardest hit is Everything to Feel Something, self-loathing sublimated into a sweetly ethereal numbness.

There are nagging hooks, yet a relentless inward focus gets exhausting over 14 tracks.

Though No Shame ultimately feels more like a transition than a reinvention, it’s good to see Allen coming back for seconds. 

• Lily Allen: No Shame. Regal/Parlophone.

• ★★★

— Emily Mackay/Guardian News and Media  

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