Kadish Morris 

Kae Tempest: This Line Is a Curve review – sensitive and punchy

Dealing with themes of love and isolation, Tempest’s genre-blending fourth album is their most grounded project to date
  
  

Kae Tempest.
‘Theatrical ebbs and flows’: Kae Tempest. Photograph: Wolfgang Tillmans

Kae Tempest is renowned for their narrative-led, socially conscious writings that span poetry and fiction, playwriting and music. The Line Is a Curve is their fourth album and their most grounded to date, with songs that blend electronic, pop-rock and hip-hop. It’s both a melancholy and hopeful project, dealing with isolation, love and apathy. Introspection and vulnerability preside throughout. “Nothing to hate but life,” they rap on the grayscale Nothing to Prove. Still, when Tempest decelerates the flow on No Prizes, the suspense and intensity fade away, leaving the track feeling a little empty.

Tempest’s work is at its most profound when the cadence and rhythms embody those of the spoken word. The theatrical ebbs and flows of their vocals on Salt Coast acutely capture the timely themes of “sleeve-pulling nervousness” caused by everything from Covid to micro-aggressions. “The whole sky is broken. It opens upon me,” they weep over stirring guitar and drums in the exhilarating These Are the Days. Sensitive and punchy as always.

Watch the video for Salt Coast by Kae Tempest.
 

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