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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Getting there, still some unrealised potential, January 17, 2003
Three events took place in music in between Craig David's debut on "Born To Do It" and this, his sophomore offering. Two of them he was directly responsible for, the third not as much so. All three have benefitted this album considerably.The first is the Craig's writing has matured. Where "Born To Do It" hobbled from cliche to cliche and sounded as though it was put together by someone still feeling his way through the music business, "Slicker Than Your Average" is a much more adventurous offering. Two of the standout cuts here "What's Your Flava?" and "Rise And Fall" benefit considerably from Craig's discovery of (in the case of the former) creative metaphors to describe women (in this case, icecream flavours) and for the latter the discovery that there are other things to sing about. "Rise And Fall" also demonstrates Craig's increasing maturity in that it features Sting on the chorus. Sting's experience as a songwriter - which is considerable, no matter what anyone wants to say about his work after The Police - is clearly visible throughout that track. One slight downside of Craig's maturation as a songwriter is the appearance of an expletive (well, that's what it's listed as in the lyrics, it's not exactly clear when he sings it) on the title track. No matter, a bit of swearing here and there never really hurt anybody and for an artist trying to present a slightly tougher image it's probably a sound move. The second event is that Craig David became a famous person in his own right. Where "Born" covered very predictable lyrical ground - women and parties - in a rather domestic fashion, "Slicker" throws Craig's new-found fame into the mix as well. On tracks like "Eenie Meenie", a relatively straightforward song about a relationship gone wrong, Craig is able to outline the perils he faces of girlfriends who have a "gold-digger's degree". Fame is also the subject of the title track, a protest at his treatment by those who claim that he's sold out to the RnB world - a criticism not entirely unjustified on "Born To Do It" alone. The third event was that garage music, Craig's musical base, became more recognisable as a viable style. The success of acts like the So Solid Crew and The Streets has fueled a hunger for the sped-up beats of garage - and Craig (who was, after all, discovered by garage impresarios The Artful Dodger) doesn't disappoint. He's always made the point that he isn't just a garage act, but including a track entitled "2 Steps Back" is a sure-fire clue that there'll be some of that about the place. That track delivers on the promise, but to some extent it suffers a bit in that the rest of the album promotes "Craig David the RnB singer" and "Craig David the garage act" seems a bit incongruous. Perhaps some garage influences throughout the album would have been a better decision. As an album, "Slicker Than Your Average" does the job competently and successfully. "Flava" and a handful of other tracks are strong enough for consideration as singles, and there are enough slower ballads to keep that sector of the audience happy. The musical backing has improved considerably since the skeletal tracks of "Born To Do It", improved to the point that "Flava" could almost be mistaken for an attempt at G-Funk at times. That quality is a considerable plus for "Slicker". Having listened to the hour's worth of music, though, it is hard to shake the belief that Craig is capable of more - as many of the remixes from "Born To Do It" demonstrate - and this is merely a foretaste of what he can do. That said, it's quite a good foretaste.
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