Five years passed between
Maysa's self-titled debut album of 1995 and her next solo effort,
All My Life. While
Maysa ranged from decent to excellent, this consistently excellent CD is even stronger: more focused and more confident, yet more chance taking, more diverse, and totally unpredictable.
All My Life gets off to a jazzy, Sade-ish start with "Got to Be Strong," which should please quiet storm enthusiasts. But
Maysa, much to her credit, turns the album into a real R&B roller coaster by providing everything from club-friendly deep house on "Pressure" and "Hooked on Your Love" to hypnotic, British-sounding acid jazz on "Sunshine" and "Mirrors." And the singer really soars on an irresistible house interpretation of "The Bottle,"
Gil Scott-Heron's 1970s commentary on alcoholism in the inner city. So is the big-voiced
Maysa really a dance diva at heart? A jazzy quiet storm/smooth jazz singer? A retro-soul belter?
All My Life gives the impression that she's all of those things and more, and it's clearly among the finest, most exciting R&B releases of 2000.