Demi Lovato is never shy with her album titles. She shrugged that her second album offered more of the same (
Here We Go Again), she bounced back whole from a turbulent spell (
Unbroken), then she found a new mature identity (
Demi) and, now on her fifth album, she's all about being
Confident. Deservedly so, too, because this 2015 album is
Lovato's best all-around record since her 2008 debut,
Don't Forget.
Confident is steely, assured dance and shimmering electro-pop, as much a reflection of its time as the sugary blast of Radio Disney pop on
Don't Forget. If that debut seemed somewhat driven by producers,
Confident feels directed by
Lovato, who seems to take some pride in being a bit of a pop magpie, sampling from every glittering sound flickering across the pop charts in the two years since
Demi. She's fortunate to be aided by some of the best producers and writers in the business.
Max Martin collaborates on three tracks, the same number as
Steve Mac, with
Stargate and
Ryan Tedder showing up elsewhere, and while their work helps
Lovato echo everyone from
Katy Perry to
Beyoncé, it never quite seems like the singer is mimicking her fellow divas: instead, she's carving out her persona -- something sexy, flinty, and impassioned, the stance of a survivor, not a carpetbagger -- through the best of what's around. Given this boldness, it's little surprise that
Demi often fares best with the numbers that are brassy: the big, heavy swing of the title track, the same-sex seduction of "Cool for the Summer," the empowering "For You" and "Lionheart," the latter a gleaming wall of sound. When the tempo slows,
Lovato can sometimes stumble -- "Father" is spare and skeletal but indistinct, a sketch that is nevertheless preferable to the shoehorned
Iggy Azalea cameo on "Kingdom Come" -- yet here, she also illustrates how she can affect
Lana Del Rey's affectless effect and conjure some of the lushness of
Ellie Goulding's neon-streaked midnight anthems, so when these ballads are added to the brighter, swifter numbers, the cumulative result is a messy, colorful modern pop record that is greater than the sum of its parts. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine