A year after her vocals on
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis' "Same Love" made her into a star,
Mary Lambert delivered
Heart on My Sleeve, her full-length debut. Unlike
Welcome to the Age of My Body, her time-buying 2013 EP, this downplays
Lambert's roots as a poet, instead positioning her as a somewhat conventional singer/songwriter. This means, despite a doleful voice-and-piano reading of
Rick Springfield's "Jessie's Girl,"
Heart on My Sleeve resembles the immaculate melodicism of
Sara Bareilles more than the elusive, elliptical
Tori Amos.
Lambert may find space for a passing piece of poetry and mildly incongruous cameos from
Angel Haze and
K. Flay (their appearances feels like a nod to her own hip-hop-fueled rise), but the heart of the record lies in sweetly melancholic adult contemporary that is easy to digest. Coming after the willfully quirky
Welcome to the Age of My Body, this shift is something of a surprise, but by emphasizing melody and feel over art and angst,
Lambert's come up with a debut that goes down quite smoothly. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine