Sudan Archives: Natural Brown Prom Queen review – dizzying earworms

(Stones Throw)
Post-genre American musician Brittney Parks extends her range yet further on her dizzying second album

Eighteen tracks long and hellbent on swerving lanes, Sudan Archives’ second album proper is one of those records that invites you to get comfortable in its dizzying headspace. Drawing from a wide array of sources – hip-hop, R&B, west African traditions, club beats, up-to-date digitals, analogue handclaps, looped strings – it all hangs together as a portrait of an artist keen to emphasise her range and primacy. Or, as Sudan Archives puts it on OMG Britt, a straight-up trap track: “They gonna have a fit when they hear this shit!”

Born in Cincinnati (that’s the 513 area code of the closing track) but relocated to LA, Brittney Parks is a post-genre operative whose skillset seems to expand with each release. Natural Brown Prom Queen brings her closer to the mainstream, thanks to takes on R&B that range from the canonical – Ciara, Freakalizer – to the more restless: Home Maker, or ChevyS10, a booty call where Parks deploys an angelic falsetto, a quote from Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car and an on-trend disco denouement. Parks’s earworms don’t hurt either. As woozy and restless as these multipart productions are, she packs in plenty of sticky stuff: melodies, hooks, insistent figures. On the glorious title track, she chafes against colourism up against a Middle Eastern string loop that doesn’t quit.

Watch the video for Natural Brown Prom Queen by Sudan Archives.

Contributor

Kitty Empire

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
Sudan Archives: Athena review – Afro futurism goes mainstream
(Stones Throw)

Kitty Empire

27, Oct, 2019 @4:30 AM

Article image
One to watch: Cookiee Kawaii
Blending Jersey club music, Chicago footwork and silky slow jams, the TikTok star is much more than one viral hit

Kadish Morris

10, Oct, 2020 @1:00 PM

AKA review – J-Lo's thoroughly forgettable eighth album
Laughable lyrics are the most entertaining thing about Jennifer Lopez's eighth album, writes Phil Mongredien

Phil Mongredien

14, Jun, 2014 @11:02 PM

Article image
Tayla Parx: Coping Mechanisms review – a treat of a breakup album
The songwriter steps out of Ariana Grande’s studio and into her own for this impressive, genre-crossing second solo album

Tara Joshi

22, Nov, 2020 @1:00 PM

Article image
Sault: Aiir, Earth, Today & Tomorrow, Untitled (God), 11 review – an act of supreme generosity
The esteemed collective release five dazzlingly eclectic albums, melding rap, post-punk and modern classical composition

Damien Morris

13, Nov, 2022 @1:00 PM

Article image
Vegyn: The Road to Hell Is Paved With Good Intentions review – steely relentlessness and glossy melodies
An engaging, 90s trip-hop-inspired turn from the English producer combines fractured storytelling and long instrumental passages

Damien Morris

07, Apr, 2024 @2:00 PM

Article image
Mura Masa: Mura Masa review – a cutting-edge swordsmith
Electronic wizard Alex Crossan conjures shivers and warmth on his star-studded debut

Kitty Empire

16, Jul, 2017 @8:00 AM

Article image
Kitty Empire: best rock and pop of 2016
Mavericks were lost, Dylan bagged a Nobel (and then went quiet), the Knowles sisters sparkled, and grime moved centre stage

Kitty Empire

04, Dec, 2016 @7:00 AM

Article image
Holly Herndon: Proto review – dizzying beauty and bracing beats
(4AD)

Emily Mackay

12, May, 2019 @7:00 AM

Article image
Summer 2018 playlists, chosen by Goat Girl, Justice, Hot Chip and more
Musicians reveal the songs they turn to when the sun hits the sky – listen to their hot tracks below

Interviews by Kathryn Bromwich and Sam Lewis

03, Jun, 2018 @9:00 AM