Rating:
Genre:
R&B
Release Date: 08/31/2004
Four long years after the issue of
Who Is Jill Scott?: Words and Sounds, Vol. 1, the woman returns.
Scott has retained a good portion of her team from her debut, like
Steve McKeever and co-executive producer
Jazzy Jeff Townes.
Larry Gold is still in charge of the elegant string arrangements,
Andre Harris and
Vidal Davis are still here in the rhythm section, and there are others. But there are some top-flight guests here as well, including the great
jazz trumpeter
Nicholas Payton,
Raphael Saadiq, and songwriter and pianist
Peter Kuzma, just to name a few. Musically,
Scott strolls and swaggers joyously in the no man's land between
soul,
funk,
jazz, and, of course, those swinging
hip-hop beats. The
spoken word interludes that were so prescient on her debut are all but absent here;
Beautifully Human is a singer's record. And what a singer!
Scott cites
Minnie Riperton once more in her thank-yous. One can feel the presence of that influence here, gracing the shimmering grooves in
"My Petition" and
"Spring Summer Feeling." But lest the listener think this is all sweetness and light, one must remember the artist's considerable lyrical flair that goes for the grain of the matter, whether that be in the heart, the heavens, or the pit of love's belly. The latter track -- with all of its beautiful strings and acoustic guitars floating, hovering, and gently rolling under the singer's voice -- is punctured by crooned lines like "...it takes more than diamonds/To get me wet." On the laid-back
hip-hop manifesto of
"I'm Not Afraid," Scott poetically (what else?) lays out not only her sexuality but her spirit, one informing the other, speaking of herself as a free individual who is a willing partner in union in eros, spirit, and everyday life. When it gets to the handclapped silvery
funk of
"Golden," Scott offers another manifesto, one of accepting life on its own terms and making it hers. She once again evokes the paradoxes in relationships, where -- despite her autonomy -- she needs her partner, not for anything but love. The slippery-slope 4/4 backbeat and winding acoustic guitars flow around the singer as she lets her sweet honeyed voice seep into her lyric. Likewise, the
jazz piano and loop of
"Cross My Mind" show another side of that same equation as the singer alternately speaks and sings her desire.
"Bedda at Home" is the steamy midnight queen
funk-
soul cut. It's not only in the pocket; its groove is infectious. The sound-effected
Motown-kissed
soul/
hip-hop weave of
"Family Reunion" is bittersweet, full of wisdom and rough tenderness. Ultimately,
Beautifully Human is an even stronger recording than its predecessor. It's seamless in its construction, unlittered in its production, honestly and elegantly articulated in its poetic
soul, and utterly intoxicating in its groove consciousness.
~Thom Jurek, All Music Guide