Since 
Sarah Cracknell was busy being the voice of 
Saint Etienne, it's hard to blame her too much for taking almost two decades to deliver her second solo album. After giving 
Red Kite a spin though, it's good enough that it's easy to wish that she had done it sooner. Unlike her 1997 album 
Lipslide, this time out 
Cracknell takes a giant step away from the patented 
Saint Etienne sound, surrounding her whisper-soft vocals with chamber pop, country-rock, and folk trappings (i.e., lots of guitars) while capturing the same sepia-toned nostalgic melancholy so much of their work has. Producing the album and playing many of the instruments is 
Edwyn Collins collaborator and 
Colorama leader 
Carwyn Ellis, and he helps give 
Cracknell's songs rich and warm backing. There is a fair amount of variety within the framework the two built. Sad, quiet, and blanketed with strings and vintage keys, songs like "On the Swings" and the shimmering "It's Never Too Late" feel like 
Left Banke album tracks with 
Françoise Hardy on vocals; the country-rock-peaceful "Nothing Left to Talk About" meanders along happily and sports a vocal cameo from 
Nicky Wire; and a few tracks have some of her main group's light and fun feel, especially the very France-in-the-'60s-sounding "Hearts Are for Breaking." A couple tracks take unexpected turns: the folky "Take the Silver," which features 
the Rails on vocals, and the swaggering mod rocker "I Am Not Your Enemy." While the former is just a little too on-the-nose, the latter track works like a charm and shows that 
Cracknell can rock out a bit when the occasion calls for it. Choosing 
Ellis as a collaborator was a brilliant move on 
Cracknell's part; he's the perfect foil for her and he does everything possible to make the album sound great. She keeps up her end of the bargain, writing a batch of heartfelt songs and delivering them with her always lovely style. It's a perfect match and the result is an album well worth the wait. Hopefully the next one won't take as long to materialize.