Music Review: Olivia Dean breaks down 'The Art of Loving' with jazzy soul-pop sounds

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Music Review: Olivia Dean breaks down 'The Art of Loving' with jazzy soul-pop sounds


Olivia Dean, the rising British soul pop singer-songwriter, has returned with a confident sophomore album, β€œThe Art of Loving.” Across 12 tracks, Dean cements her spot in a growing class of talented young U.K.-born vocalists β€” think Raye and Lola Young β€” as she embraces her role as a traditionalist and a romantic.

Music Review: Olivia Dean breaks down 'The Art of Loving' with jazzy soul-pop sounds
Music Review: Olivia Dean breaks down ‘The Art of Loving’ with jazzy soul-pop sounds

The album lands Friday, on the heels of Dean’s late summer hit, β€œMan I Need,” which has continued to rise on the Billboard Hot 100 and U.K. charts since its August debut. It also caps an expansive two-year period since Dean’s buzzy 2023 debut β€œMessy,” that saw her profile rise as she collaborated with Sam Fender on the anthemic β€œRein Me In” and scored a place on the β€œBridget Jones: Mad About the Boy” soundtrack.

Dean wears her influences on her sleeve, and in her name β€” her middle name, Lauryn, is an homage to Lauryn Hill, a favorite of her parents. She also follows in the footsteps of U.K. pop powerhouses. β€œLoud” channels Amy Winehouse or Adele, her full voice isolated over strings and a plucked guitar melody. β€œClose Up” does the same over piano and horns. The smooth β€œA Couple Minutes” features a sample of the guitar riff from 1971’s β€œWe Had True Love,” by the British soul-disco band Hot Chocolate. Dean’s vocals, interlaced with hums, amplify the familiar rhythm.

On β€œBaby Steps,” Dean embraces self-love after a breakup, returning to themes found on her breakthrough hits, like 2023’s groovy β€œLadies Room.” β€œI’ll be my own pair of safe hands,” she sings atop varied percussion, rich organ and layered backing vocals. β€œThere’ll be roses on the shelf / ‘Cause this house gone love itself,” she tiptoes toward a new beginning, the steady beat leading her into a confident groove.

Strings swell beneath the soft-sung album opener β€œThe Art of Loving ,” where Dean introduces the project as an exploration of the feeling. β€œIt’s the art of loving / It wasn’t all for nothing,” she explains. β€œSomething lost and something gained.”

β€œI’ve Seen It,” the album’s final song, is her conclusion. It’s a promise that if you look for it, you’ll find that love actually is all around. β€œI’ve heard it laced in every song,” she sings sweetly. And later: β€œI’ve seen it dance with friends around the table.”

β€œI know it’s somewhere in my chest / I guess it’s been inside me all along,” she observes at the song’s end, her voice soft and assured. It takes her far on the album and will do so in her career: Dean will tour with Sabrina Carpenter in the U.S. this fall, before launching her first arena tour in the U.K.

β€œThe Art of Loving” by Olivia Dean

Four out of five stars.

On repeat: β€œA Couple Minutes”

Skip it: β€œThe Art of Loving ”

For fans of: Laufey, Adele, Raye, autumn

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