MARGO
(REY)
Habit
Organica
Music Group
*
Margo—aka/ Margo Rey, born Mararita
Reymundo—has a fabulous voice. Alas, she’s not much of a singer. The Mexican-born
singer wants to be a pop star in the worst way, and Habit suggests she’s succeeded. Though she’s 46, she sings with the
breathless slightly nasal tones of dozens of other flavor-of-the-month “girly” Los
Angeles studio singers that haunt the pop charts. Her material falls into that not-quite-R
& B, not-quite-jazz, and not-quite-standard gray seam that showcases the
voice, not the song. It’s the sort of look-at-me music I label diva-pop. There’s
nothing inherently wrong with showcasing God-given talent, but the net effect
of spotlighting vocal pyrotechnics at the expense of thoughtful interpretation is
akin to watching a world-class athlete do calisthenics—you keep waiting for
practice to end and the real performance to begin. By the time you’ve wended
your way through the album’s 13 tracks, not a single one will stand out and Margo
could have been singing about algorithms for all you’ll recall. In fact, I sort
of wondered if the studio did employ algorithms
during the production; the aptly named Habit
uses every LA studio cliché imaginable—atmospheric guitar filler, cool-toned
vibes, horn rhythm sections, vanilla bridges, and instrumentation that ascends
and descends with the vocals. It’s too bad, because Margo has serious chops. I’d
love to hear what she could do with a distinctive song and a demanding producer.
Until that happens, toss this one in the same bin as all the other generic
one-named divas—Beyonce, Brandy, Rihanna, Shakira—but toss it you should.—Rob Weir
I love her songs about logical positivism and the hegemony of the bourgeoisie. Killers each!
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