Music
Music

Kenna's Make Sure They See My Face

Make sure you hear the urban legend marketers couldn't kill

DAN LEROY

Tuesday, October 9th 2007

Most Popular

Most Popular sponsored by

How could a guy produced by one of the Neptunes and described by U2's manager as a future world-changer be a commercial stiff? Author Malcolm Gladwell couldn't believe the failure of Kenna's 2003 debut, New Sacred Cow, either, and devoted a chapter of his latest bestseller, Blink, to "Kenna's Dilemma." The conclusion Gladwell reached about the Ethiopian-born, Virginia Beach–raised artist? Music experts understood and adored Kenna's fusion of new wave and cutting-edge r&b, but random focus groups evaluating 30-second sound clips lacked the time and tools to judge it properly.

Of course, focus groups run the music business, and Kenna's long-delayed second album reflects that harsh reality. It's difficult to imagine that "Baptized in Blacklight," with its surging, Coldplay-sized chorus, would flunk a blind taste test, and the whole of Make Sure They See My Face—again partially overseen by Neptune Chad Hugo—is inviting and immediate, benefiting from the familiarity dance-punk's rise has brought to ersatz disco like "Say Goodbye to Love." The greatest thrill, however, is that Kenna's square-peg edges still never quite line up with the mainstream hole. "Loose Wires" employs the same sparse, percussive beat that's underlaid many a Neptunes hit, with an Off the Wall hook Justin Timberlake would bring "SexyBack" for. But Kenna subverts the bodyrockin' premise by summoning his inner Gary Numan, keening android-like about "riding around with glossed-over eyes." That wonderfully weird streak makes it unsure Kenna's face will ever get seen; regardless, as Gladwell suggested, those who know music need to know about this.

Recent Articles

More by DAN LEROY

Village Voice Insiders

  • Weekly villagevoice.com
  • Weekly freebies and Special Offers
  • Daily "What To Do in NYC" E-mail
  • Information on the Performing Arts
  • New York Bites - Restaurants Newsletter
Backpage.com
169 Bar NYC
1849
bb kings
the bitter end
blender
blue note
bowery ballroom
hammerstein ballroom
highline ballroom
iridium jazz club
irving plaza
knitting factory
nokia theatre
pianos
red lion
roseland
sounds of brazil
southpaw