Fergie made the most of her first solo album,
The Dutchess, the culmination of over 20 years in the business, a multi-platinum smash with five singles that were either unavoidable or close to it. Eight years later, after two more albums with
the Black Eyed Peas, she released the first single off what became her follow-up. "L.A.LOVE (La La)," outfitted with co-production from
DJ Mustard and a verse from
YG, and shouts to many other locations including Kingston and Jamaica, arrived just after the somewhat Fergalicious
Iggy Azalea crashed the mainstream. It wasn't nearly as successful as the debut's singles -- not in the U.S., at least -- but it did go platinum. Three more years passed prior to the arrival of
Double Dutchess, which seemed to signal some hesitancy, though the period was likely lengthened by
Fergie's split from Interscope and the establishment of her BMG-supported Dutchess Music label. With a little help from
BEP partner
will.i.am, and input from past and new cross-genre production associates ranging from
Toby Gad and
Polow da Don to
Cirkut and
Alesso,
Double Dutchess is similar to
The Dutchess in makeup. It mixes nostalgic and contemporary rap elements, applies references to various global sounds, and veers from cartoonish club tracks and belting pop ballads.
Fergie's in typically uninhibited, sometimes irreverent form, commanding "Ladies, rub on your titties" (on a track where she also recalls
Salt-N-Pepa and
Audio Two), swapping carefree verses with
Nicki Minaj over the inexhaustible "Think (About It)" break, singing in falsetto over slick neo-disco, and wailing in the red on the cathartic finale. Amid all the sensible updates to the debut's approach is a slight surprise, "Enchanté (Carine)," a loopy, sugary French-English number with
Fergie's son along for the ride, sounding like the second coming of
Jordy.
Double Dutchess couldn't possibly match the commercial success of
The Dutchess, and much of it is merely adequate, but
Fergie is demonstrably as energized, and having a ball with nothing left to prove.