Rufus Wainwright – Poses

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The scrutiny of success that came early on–being named Best New Artist by Rolling Stone in 1998, the year of his debut album, for example–would have smothered many another emerging talent. But it failed to stopper the singular, unclassifiable, ranging gift of singer/songwriter Rufus Wainwright. His sophomore album, Poses, advances beyond the earlier, cabaret-inspired effort with a suite of songs marvelously varied in arrangement and texture but linked by Wainwright’s characteristic theatrical panache. “Cigarettes and Chocolate Milk” catalogs excess with playful self-censure, but Wainwright’s whimsical ironies often take a bruising, poignant turn, whether in the pseudo-upbeat “California” or, most movingly, on the title track. The dying fall of Wainwright’s lusher melodies–echoes of “Across the Universe” as well as ultrachic Beatles tunes such as “Michelle”–meshes remarkably with the poetic substance here as he explores a landscape of wistful self-knowledge caught between longing and decadence. Yet even through all the layers of picturesque, postmod observation, Wainwright conveys a sense-filtered experience that gives urgency to his hauntingly mumbled opacities. With Poses, the young artist proves his authenticity. –Thomas May