Shaad D'Souza 

Ari Lennox: Vacancy review – the R&B sophisticate’s loosest and most fun outing yet

On her third LP, Lennox balances jazz-soaked tradition with flashes of unruly humour and a surefire viral hit
  
  

Ari Lennox.
Sparky … Ari Lennox. Photograph: Gizelle Hernandez

Ari Lennox is one of contemporary R&B’s premier sophisticates, preferring a palette of lush jazz, soul and 90s hip-hop over the more genre-fluid sound pushed by contemporaries SZA and Kehlani. But a few songs into her new album, Vacancy, she makes it eminently clear that tradition and wildness can coexist, with fabulously sparky results: on Under the Moon, she describes a lover as “vicious / Like a werewolf / When you’re in it” and proceeds to howl “moooooooooon” as if she is in an old creature feature.

Vacancy, Lennox’s third album, is far and away her most fun, and if it isn’t quite as ingratiating as her 2022 Age/Sex/Location, it makes up for it with canny lyrics and an airy, open sound. Cool Down is a reggae/R&B hybrid that practically feels as if it is made of aerogel, and which pairs its summery lightness with witty lyrics telling a guy to chill out. On Mobbin in DC, she pairs lounge-singer coolness with withering come-ons (“You know where I be / This ain’t calculus / No ChatGPT”), while the strutting Horoscope, with its hook of “That boy put the ho’ in ‘horoscope’,” is as surefire a future viral hit as I’ve ever heard.

Much has been made of Lennox’s struggles in the industry – she has faced harassment from radio DJs and fought publicly with past labels – but the sheer ease with which she performs on Vacancy suggests there’s plenty of road ahead.

 

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