%20Dua%20Lipa%20-%20Illusion.png)
“Training Season” was extremely underwhelming, despite how promising the preview sounded. “Illusion” on the other hand sounded underwhelming from the preview, but I remained [turns and looks into the camera] radically optimistic that perhaps the full song would wow me.
Y’all. I was not wowed.
Not even a little bit.
This review of “Illusion” could also be a review for “Training Season”, because I feel the same way about both songs—they sound incomplete. When I first got done listening to them, I was like ‘Oh, that’s it? That’s the song?’.And it’s really unfortunate, because with both “Training Season” and “Illusion” I can hear the potential for greatness. But they do not deliver enough on that potential to be all that they could be. Both “Training Season” and “Illusion” were released with extended mixes, which was crazy, because there is barely enough in either song to hold attention for just about three minutes, let alone five. At least the extended mix for “Houdini” felt more than just sections copied and pasted to up the runtime, with the inclusion of an additional verse and slightly different production—leading me to believe that the extended mix of “Houdini” is actually an cut version of the song, which makes its existence cool.
It’s crazy hearing Dua mention in interviews how particular she was about the lyrics of these songs, and how she and her posse of writers would keep refining every part of a song until it felt right. Yet we’ve ended up with two singles back-to-back which were in dire need of refinement. And as much as I like “Houdini”, even that song could have done with another couple of passes and tweaks.
“Training Season” at least had a cool sound going for it, courtesy of Kevin Parker, whose sound was a huge part of what made me fall for “Houdini”. And whilst you can still very much hear his imprint on “Illusion”, Dua’s performance contributes massively to the song sounding generic. If “Illusion” were a Tame Impala song, it would have been better, because of how Kevin Parker would have sounded on it. But the way Dua sings the song just makes the whole thing sound so flat and void of any levels, especially given that we’ve heard her perform in this exact same way on songs like “Love Again” and “Hallucinate”—which she also made sound flat as hell. And I know it’s her dragging “Illusion” down, because the instrumental is actually fire and sounds better without her. “Illusion” sounds like every other song that’s been played on UK radio for the past couple of decades. At least the same couldn’t be said for “Houdini” and “Training Season”.
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Dua Lipa - Illusion | Warner Records / Radical22 |
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Dua Lipa - Illusion | Warner Records / Radical22 |
I get that low energy and not giving much is kind of Dua’s thing. And on some songs, it works. But on others, it doesn’t. And “Illusion” is a song for me where it doesn’t. It needed more in the way of vocals and more in the way of performance, because the music of “Illusion” as it is can only do so much. If Dua isn’t willing to give PERFORMANCE and she’s not willing to stay in the studio to lay down her own background vocals instead of travelling everywhere, then she needs to just pull a Jennifer Lopez. It’s crazy to me that she played this song back after all of her vocals had been put together and said ‘Oh, that’s fine’, when there is SO much space in the song and there is so clearly more work which needed to be done to elevate the melodies and performance to a point that they soar the way the music sets them up to.
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Dua Lipa - Illusion | Warner Records / Radical22 |
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