Sex Therapy is an evasive maneuver to prevent
Robin Thicke from being pigeonholed as a “grown folks” R&B singer. It’s evident that hits -- more specifically, appealing to younger listeners -- is the goal. While
Thicke’s previous album,
Something Else, did well on the album charts, it maintained a classicist sound throughout, produced only one major single, and featured only one appearance from a guest MC.
Sex Therapy, however, enlists
Snoop Dogg,
Jay-Z,
the Game,
Kid Cudi, and
Nicki “Stick shift the ding-a-ling” Minaj -- not to mention
Estelle and
Jazmine Sullivan, both of whom contribute excellent background vocals on their respective appearances.
Thicke heightens the brashness downplayed on
Something Else, best applied on the title track, where the cunning contrast between his masculine certitude and feather-light falsetto is in full effect. That he does it while lifting the melody from “It’s My Party” -- as a near-replication of the pulse from
the Art of Noise's “Moments in Love” drifts in the background -- makes it all the more daring and remarkable. Sometimes the results are either dopey (if lighthearted), as on “Meiplé,” or humorously awkward, as on “Shakin’ It 4 Daddy,” where the oft-repeated hook “She shakin’ it for daddy, she shakin’ it for me” must make some listeners think of
Thicke and his father instead of just
Thicke. The album does not represent a total abandonment of the qualities that have connected with the singer’s adult fans. “Mrs. Sexy,” based on
Eric B. & Rakim's
Al Green-sampling “Mahogany” (to the point where he does not bother to change a line that references his skin tone), is as buttery and elegant as anything he has recorded. On “Million Dolla Baby,” he takes his
Marvin Gaye fixation another step forward, using “Trouble Man” as its backbone; even if it strikes you as corny, you have to admit that it is pretty slick. Above all, he continues to put one of the best voices in R&B to good use. [
Sex Therapy: The Experience contains five additional songs. One is a brief intro and another is an interlude. The other three are not dazzling. The insatiable fans are the only ones who need to seek it out.] ~ Andy Kellman