Hayley Kiyoko: Expectations review – a sparkling, LA-dreamy debut

(Atlantic)

She may have done her time on the Disney Channel, but that’s as close as 26-year-old Angeleno Hayley Kiyoko likes to hew to the standard pop backstory. Her airy, LA-dreamy debut album sounds sparklingly refreshing, with none of the usual suspects in its production credits, and Kiyoko’s own songwriting voice – frank, fun, fearlessly tussling with her emotions – floods through. Feelings sets out her open-hearted manifesto (“sorry that I care… sick and tired of acting all tough”) over fat bassline and light beats, her voice sweet and unshowy, but there’s more than just summer crush material here(though Palm Dreams takes a G-funky shot at joining the ranks of west coast-representin’ sunshine jams).

Any album that starts with an “overture” has more than average ambitions, and beyond the spry, fast-talking R&B confections of Curious and He’ll Never Love You and the adorable What I Need (with Kehlani) – feather-light in construction but deadly in their hooks – are songs of affecting subtlety, like the startling night-terror atmospherics of Mercy/Gatekeeper, in which a sleepless Kiyoko longs to “bang my head until I start to fly”.

Pretty far from standard filler, but just as Kiyoko found greater success when she started being open about her sexuality in her lyrics, staying true to idiosyncratic instinct has made Expectations feel more universal than a generic, play-it-safe debut. It might not be what you were expecting, but it’s just what your pop playlist needs.

Watch the video for Curious by Hayley Kiyoko.

Contributor

Emily Mackay

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Hayley Kiyoko: Panorama review – second album is a leap backwards
This follow-up to her striking 2018 debut Expectations finds the LA singer-songwriter stymied by a synthetic production style

Ammar Kalia

31, Jul, 2022 @8:00 AM

Article image
Teen: Good Fruit review – dreamy new depths
(Carpark)

Emily Mackay

03, Mar, 2019 @8:00 AM

Article image
King Krule: Man Alive! review – stirring, dreamy optimism
(XL)

Tara Joshi

23, Feb, 2020 @3:00 PM

Article image
Amaarae: Fountain Baby review – sexy, sparkling dream pop
Drawing on a whole world of sounds, the Ghanaian American’s second album proper is a summery delight

Tara Joshi

11, Jun, 2023 @2:00 PM

Article image
SZA: Control review – dreamy and delicious insights into vulnerability
(RCA)

Tara Joshi

11, Jun, 2017 @6:59 AM

Article image
Ten Fé: Hit the Light review – sparkling songcraft
(Some Kinda Love/Pias)

Emily Mackay

05, Feb, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Zayn: Icarus Falls review – defies expectations
(RCA)

Tara Joshi

23, Dec, 2018 @8:15 AM

Article image
Lous and the Yakuza: Iota review – showcasing her dreamy side
The Congolese-Belgian singer’s second album delivers on ballads and heartbreak while retaining her debut’s swagger

Kitty Empire

13, Nov, 2022 @9:00 AM

Article image
Clairo: Immunity review – a winning debut
(Fader)

Emily Mackay

04, Aug, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Shygirl: Nymph review – a sensuous, playful debut
British rapper, DJ and singer-songwriter Blane Muise slinks between genres, mischief and melody on her experimental first album

Ammar Kalia

02, Oct, 2022 @2:00 PM