Week 20: Rag n Bone Man- Life by Misadventure

I was astonished to find out it is four years since his debut “Human” was released. You would have expected another record by then, but no. Since then, there has been a lot of touring (Before the obvious) and collaborations. Let’s do a pretty short and sweet summary of the album:

Breath in Me: A song about heartbreak and how he would be happy, dead or alive if his former lover were free and happy.

Fall in Love Again: We have all been here for sure—a track about being afraid to fall in love again after being bitten once. 

Anywhere Away from Here: There are two versions on this record. Ultimately, he does his one, but we will focus on the one with P!NK. A tear-evoking love song and feeling insecure about being in a relationship: their strong vocals work well.

All You Ever Wanted: I first heard this on Later…with Jools Holland a few months ago and didn’t think much of it. I was impressed, as always, with his vocal performance, which has stayed the same since I have listened to the record. However, I can now see its worth on “Life by Misadventure” as it is a departure from the rest of the album as it is more uplifting and rock-sounding.

Even though the album starts brightly with a new sense of direction, it starts to peter out after the halfway point, and he tries too hard to keep that momentum. He may have felt the heat of trying to emulate his debut.

Song recommendations: ‘Fall in Love Again, ‘Anywhere Away from Here’, ‘Breath in Me’

7/10

Week Seven: Rag n Bone Man- Human

Human

It’s impossible not to judge this man on first look. He looks like a hillbilly from America (despite being from Sussex) and even has a big build, but he is inspired by gospel, soul, Motown and hip-hop and has the voice to boot. It also proves that the charts are not just exclusive to the generic pop music that features heavily in this day and age, as Rag n Bone Man’s gospel-laden record has gone straight in at the top of the album charts, and his single also reached the summit in the singles chart. His voice is heavily influenced by his idol Muddy Waters. From ‘Human’ onwards, the album is in top gear to the closing track ‘Die Easy’.

Rag n Bone Man was born into music, and his father played slide guitar. Rag n Bone Man started singing in the local pub nights before moving to Brighton and muscled his way into the trending hip-hop scene.

This album combines both influences, which you can hear in ‘Be the Man’ and ‘Ego’ for hip-hop and ‘Innocent Man’ for the blues. The gospel-laden album and the church sound piano are especially evidence of that on ‘As You Are’. This may not be a preaching or bible-bashing album, but there are those themes that one would associate with religion.

The songs that really stand out on the record are ‘Bitter End’,’ Ego’, ‘Grace’ and ‘Human’ the latter that propelled Rag n Bone Man into the public eye after the acoustic version of the song debuted on Later…with Jools Holland in October 2016. That demo sent to Jools to hear probably kicked it all off for Rag n Bone Man, and his performance on Jools’ show fully justified Jools’ decision to give him the platform he so richly deserved. After this stunning debut record, he has set the benchmark for himself for his next album.

9/10