June LGBTQ music: Cynthia Erivo and Lucy Liyou
This month, Gay City News reviews the latest albums bi singer/actor Cynthia Erivo and trans singer/pianist Lucy Liyou. Cynthia Erivo | “I Forgive You” | Verve/Republic | June 6 Even without last year’s release of “Wicked: Part 1,” in which she performed a duet with Ariana Grande on “Defying Gravity,” British singer Cynthia Erivo’s background … Read More

Cynthia Erivo | “I Forgive You” | Verve/Republic | June 6
Even without last year’s release of “Wicked: Part 1,” in which she performed a duet with Ariana Grande on “Defying Gravity,” British singer Cynthia Erivo’s background in musical theater can’t be missed. Her voice reaches to the rafters. She cushions herself with harmonies: Rarely is there just one incarnation of Erivo in the mix. Even though she draws from R&B and gospel, her voice has little grit. With copious backing vocals and strings, the production on “I Forgive You” is clean. Her idea of pop keeps one toe in showtunes and the Great American Songbook and the other in Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston’s backyard. The set list of her 2022 concert video shows where she’s coming from, with covers of songs peformed by Edith Piaf, Nina Simone, Jacques Brel, Sinead O’Connor, Gladys Knight, and Roberta Flack. As a whole, “I Forgive You” relates to a story: a breakup, followed by an embrace of a new relationship. A softly passive-aggressive undercurrent ripples through the album. As she explains her departure to her ex, she sings, “I’m guilty, but I’m not ashamed…that’s why I had to leave.” “I Choose Love” aims its praises of her new partner at her former lover, testifying “I’m not sorry for what I did.” “Replay” sets Erivo’s mistakes to an upbeat track. She can get spiteful: “this is what you deserve, all my pain in return,” she sings on “You First.” Once she arrives in the present, she seems happier: “What You Want” sings the praises of a mutually supportive relationship, and “Be Okay” is an ode to spending time indoors as a couple. “Holy Refrain” and “Brick by Brick” are love songs taking imagery from Christianity, with a gospel choir backing Erivo on the former. A practicing Catholic, Erivo isn’t doing so to criticize organized religion but to lay out the resemblances between romantic and religious passion. Portions of Erivo’s songs, such as “You First,” float off into acapella epilogues. On three interludes and “Be Okay,” her voice stands almost entirely alone. “More Than Twice” heads into extreme melisma. Erivo’s voice and the production aim for high drama, even bombast. The most immediate banger, “Worst of Me” turns a breakup into Shakespearean tragedy. The songs themselves juxtapose heartbreak and domesticity. Despite the sour experiences many describe, they’re always engaged and impassioned.Lucy Liyou | “Every Video Without Your Face, Every Sound Without Your Name” | Orange Milk
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