CeeLo Green keeps moving through a quarter-century career full of unforeseeable twists and turns. Between scaling heights with the
Dungeon Family,
Goodie Mob, and
Gnarls Barkley, and minor and major roles in hits by
TLC,
the Pussycat Dolls, and
Bruno Mars, he has grown a solo discography showcasing divergent creative impulses as much as his undervalued vocals and songwriting. Going most recently by isolated moments on
The Lady Killer ("Old Fashioned" more so than "Fuck You") and
Heart Blanche ("Mother May I"), it was apparent that the Atlanta-born son of ministers could make a whole LP of organic soul evoking an era predating his birth -- if only he had the will, means, and a lack of major-label commercial expectations. That notion is essentially made manifest with
CeeLo Green Is Thomas Callaway. The title imparts an intent to humanize an artist whose outsized persona, displayed boldly as ever in 2020 on the British version of The Masked Singer, has sometimes overshadowed his music. Indeed,
CeeLo resembles an everyman here more than ever before, welcomed into the extended family of Easy Eye Sound, the authenticity-upholding studio and label operated by
Dan Auerbach (whose
Black Keys have recorded extensively with
Danger Mouse,
CeeLo's
Gnarls Barkley partner). Producer
Auerbach and his crew of mostly elder Nashville and Memphis session pros, some of whom assist
CeeLo and
Auerbach with songwriting, foster a straightforward set that, on the surface, is fine Southern soul -- late-'60s in spirit -- with a stronger country flavor than expected from
CeeLo. In a way, the connection to the
CeeLo catalog is a little looser than it is to Easy Eye offspring like
Yola's
Walk Through Fire and
Marcus King's
El Dorado, and even
John Anderson's
Years, as "Slow Down" -- the one song here that
CeeLo didn't co-write, a mismatch -- was first heard on that latter LP. As suggested on "People Watching," one of a few feel-good numbers, this is made for summertime porch listening, and it's chock-full of wafting grooves and lingering ballads that are ornamented with strings, horns, bells, and background voices, but are never overdone. Other uplifted and upbeat songs, such as "Lead Me" and "Doing It All Together," are natural picks for singles, but they're outclassed by the Philly-style weeper "Thinking Out Loud," where
CeeLo makes like
the Stylistics'
Russell Thompkins, Jr. with his bittersweet upper register. Everything is direct, whether
CeeLo is communicating with a lover, reflecting upon parenthood and mortality, or beset with romantic instability. Moreover, it's thoroughly earnest with a high level of musical detail and a seemingly untreated result attained only by master craftsmen working with a schedule that precludes fuss. (It was recorded in two days, the first of which
CeeLo assumed would be spent on writing.) When placed in the context of the singer's previous albums, its clarity, focus, and uniformly wholesome nature are almost stupefying. The restrictions have a liberating effect. ~ Andy Kellman