Filthy Underneath | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Nadine Shah |
Cover: | Nadine Shah - Filthy Underneath.png |
Alt: | A photograph of Shah staring ahead while seated on a lounge in a room illuminated with a blue glow, wearing a tight black top, baggy pants and high heels |
Length: | 49:30 |
Label: | EMI North |
Producer: | Ben Hillier |
Prev Title: | Kitchen Sink |
Prev Year: | 2020 |
Filthy Underneath is the fifth studio album by the English musician Nadine Shah, released on 23 February 2024 through EMI North. It received acclaim from critics.
The writing on the album was influenced by Shah's mother's death during the COVID-19 pandemic as well as her own substance abuse, suicide attempt and the end of her marriage.
Filthy Underneath received a score of 87 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on eleven critics' reviews, indicating "universal acclaim". The reviews aggregated on AnyDecentMusic? collectively rated it an 8.3 out of 10, based on 19 critics' scores.
Mojo called it "brilliantly executed with Shirley Bassey-like surety in an arresting, always distinctive, lyrical voice". Uncuts Daniel Dylan Wray stated that "guitars take a backseat role here and are generally utilised for adding texture and atmosphere, while synths are plentiful. Itchy, propulsive post-punk-esque rhythms are largely ditched for a more glacial and unfurling pace that gives Shah's voice room to breathe and soar".
Reviewing the album for AllMusic, Marcy Donelson called it, "far from dispirited, as [Shah] yet again tweaks her theatrical, gothy art-rock sound toward something that's glossy, dissonant, and primordial, with consistently strong grooves, thumping unison tom-toms, and Eastern musical modes weaving their way in throughout." David Pollock of Record Collector described it as "a work of compelling, visceral humanity" and "a record to fall in love with". The Quietus Amanda Farah found that it is "a strong sense of rhythm—one that has propelled Shah's catalogue—that adds a subversive infectiousness on Filthy Underneath".[1]
Will Hodgkinson of The Times praised it as "a bold and original album about her crisis years, free of self-pity and oddly uplifting", adding that "her voice... bridges the gap between Shirley Bassey and Siouxsie Sioux". Writing for The Line of Best Fit, John Amen commented, "With Filthy Underneath, Shah doesn't necessarily reinvent herself, though she certainly recommits to honesty, vulnerability, and stepping out of comfort zones, all the while documenting an important self-initiation". In NME, Max Pilley declared, "Shah is writing about the darkest places a person can reach in a devastatingly human manner that demonstrates a rare level of repose and reflection."
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