Fans might be pleased to hear the original, sparingly arranged versions of "Tears Dry on Their Own" and "Wake up Alone," both of which appeared on 2006's Back to Black, her multi-Grammy-winning sophomore set. Winehouse is at her plaintive best, though, on the stunning Motown-esque "Between the Cheats," complete with a bluesy all-male backing troupe. Sublime opener "Our Day Will Come" is pristine throwback soul, while the standard number "The Girl from Ipanema" gets a jazzy-funky reincarnation.
But Lioness just wouldn't be a proper Amy Winehouse record without a couple or more tracks steeped in heartache, a theme that the British female contingent (Winehouse, Adele, Duffy, et al) seem to consistently explore with rigour, conviction and depth. The soundly written "Halftime" and "Best Friends, Right?" continue that tradition, even if they don't match the brilliance of such Winehouse slam-dunks as "You Know I'm No Good" and "Love is a Losing Game."
The 12-track album bears a curious guest in rapper Nas, who lends characteristically sturdy rhymes to "Like Smoke," which wouldn't be out of place on Sunday evening radio. Then there's the fabulous duet "Body and Soul," with legendary swingman Tony Bennett, which is best described as a slice of nostalgic, wine-soaked heaven.
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