10 Years Ago, James Blake's Self-Titled Debut Album Made Him A Star

10 Years Ago, James Blake's Self-Titled Debut Album Made Him A Star




By Grant Sharples


No one knew James Blake could sing. Before his 2011 debut album, released 10 years prior today (February 4), the electronic songwriter-producer had primarily become known for his sample-driven, minimalist dubstep arrangements. Apart from a brief 20th-century spiritual singing clip, Blake’s 2009 debut single “Air & Lack Thereof” featured zero vocals, much like its counterpoint instrumental track, “Sparing the Horses.” Following up this single with a string of three acclaimed EPs, 2010’s The Bell Sketch, CMYK, and Klavierwerke, Blake further cemented himself in London’s electronic music scene. However it wasn’t up until his self-titled, full-length debut that he became James Blake, the songwriter-vocalist, additionally to James Blake, the producer.


Its contemporary Pitchfork review forecasted that this assortment of songs would “soon make Blake a star.” This statement couldn’t have been more prescient; in the past decade, Blake has become a unlikely celebrity. The quiet, precocious producer, only 22 years old at the time of the album’s release, would eventually go on to work with megastars like Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar, André 3000, Travis Scott, Anderson .Paak, and Vince Staples, and he’d even acquire a number of features on Lamar’s curated soundtrack for the Marvel blockbuster Black Panther. Music aside, he’d start dating actor Jameela Jamil, to whom he dedicated his fourth album, 2019’s Assume Form. Blake’s first album thrust him into the spotlight, and he continually gained even more attention with each new record.


Not only could Blake sing, however he might sing well. For an artist who'd previously used his voice only as a sample, it was surprising to hear that he had impressive chops and prowess. His flourishes and inflections, spaced out across the album’s 11 tracks, placed him a grade above other English producers of his ilk. On top of that, it turned out he was also a wonderful keyboard player. It’s as if his earlier recordings are suggestive artifacts of a different James Blake, one that mainly composes instrumental electronic tracks rather than full-fledged songs. His 2011 debut, in a peculiar way, was the initial glimpse at who Blake truly was as an artist — one who played with pop structures and warped them to fit his own vision.


This pop-centric emphasis gave Blake the liberty to reimagine others’ work in his own fashion. His cover of Canadian indie-pop songwriter Feist’s “The Quota to Your Love” is an immediate standout. Where Feist’s version is add onto light drums, piano, and backup harmonies, Blake takes the sparse piano lick and builds his own sonic setting. Replete with hushed, wobbling bass and reverberating, electronic percussion, it’s technically a cover, yet it feels entirely like Blake’s own. His version is more of a complete reimagining than it is a faithful rendition.


“Limit” isn’t the only older song on this album that’s been repurposed. Blake’s father, James Litherland, is also musician plus a founding member of the prog-rock outfit Colosseum in the late 1960s. In 2006, Litherland released a guitar-led soft-rock jam called “Where to Turn,” which Blake pays homage to on his album by flipping it into a new creation. Referred to as “The Wilhelm Scream,” Blake restructures his father’s song, using a handful of stanzas and building something new out of those. Gone are the guitars, acoustic drums, and piano; they’re replaced with ambient pads, arpeggiated synthesizers, plus a drum machine. Litherland’s version follows an established song structure, however his son creates something more akin to a loop that builds on itself ever so gradually, almost imperceptibly.


These two covers show that Blake doesn't care to mimic others’ styles, however rather adapt them to his own to reinforce his own creative approach. They even foreshadowed his covers that would become notably popular later in his career, like his version of Frank Ocean’s “Godspeed” that rose to ascendancy on TikTok. “The Wilhelm Scream” and “Limit to Your Love” helped move Blake away from the sample-heavy dubstep his EPs were laden with; they helped strengthen his artsy identity as a minimalist indie-pop songwriter-producer.


His self-titled album is also the point where he identified himself as a deceptively talented lyricist. “I Never Learnt to Share” is add onto just a handful of lines, nevertheless they’re all of the more poignant as they burrow deeper with each repetition. “My brother and my sister don’t speak to me,” Blake sings with his signature vibrato, “but I don’t blame them.” He adds layer upon layer because the track progresses, building emotionality, even as he would late admit it’s “sort of an in-joke” to his life as an only child. Opener “Unluck,” which also consists of just a few stanzas, dives further in, describing his isolation as an only child (“Only child, take good care / I wouldn’t like you playing, falling there”). Blake takes a minimalist approach to his lyrics, just as he does with his music, however each track is imbued with melancholy, like because the lament of “To Care (Like You)” and the remorse in “Give Me My Month.” This sense of gloom would soon become a key trait in his music. This is the Blake that fans know right now, and he arrived at the best moment.


In an interview with Clash magazine a number of months right after his debut album’s release, Blake discussed about how The xx “warmed the seat” for him, and that the British indie-pop trio changed the way “people listen to that brand of sparse electronic music.” The explosion of The xx heralded Blake’s arrival to the scene that also saw the burgeoning popularity of similar artists like Oneohtrix Point Never and Mount Kimbie. However In spite of the fact that the xx would afterward abandon the minimalism with 2017’s I Visualize You and producer Jamie xx’s solo effort In Colour, Blake expanded on his beginning foundation. On his next two records, Overgrown and The Colour in Anything, he used the sonic palette first explored on his debut to branch off into untrodden, more ambitious territory. 2013’s Overgrown rings like a more elevated version of James Blake, while 2016’s The Colour in Anything is his most grandiose work nevertheless, even featuring a cameo from his big-indie contemporary Bon Iver on “I require a Forest Fire.” Some critics wrote off 2019’s Assume Form as self-indulgent, nevertheless this is the most sensible trajectory for Blake, as he has continually widened his artsy scope with each new record.


Without James Blake, the artist simply wouldn’t be the James Blake as he’s currently known. Maybe he would have gone on to continue making sample-based instrumental tracks. Maybe he would have been a underground collaborator or ghostwriter as a substitute opposed to an artist in his own right. He’s worked with household names a few times, yet never at the expense of his own work or identity. Blake remains in the spotlight himself, something he made sure to clinch on the album's closer, “Measurements.” “Testing sounds for the deaf and the forest cold,” he sings, doubling his voice up until there's an entire choir. Nevertheless they're all him.









Leave a Comment

Have something to discuss? You can use the form below, to leave your thoughts or opinion regarding 10 Years Ago, James Blake's Self-Titled Debut Album Made Him A Star.

Electronic News