1, 2, 3 AAAAAAAAHHHHHHH! Hi everyone, BRATthony Greeentano here, the internet's busiest music nerd. And it's time for a review of this new record "Brat" from Charli xcx. Here we have the 6th official full-length studio album from pop-singer and songwriter Ms Charli xcx. One of my most anticipated albums of the year, why? Well, over the past decade in my eyes, Charli has grown into one of the most creative, unique, and pioneering forces in current day pop music. And her evolution has been interesting to watch, to say the least. I'm not a fan of her early work, truth be told, but today it serves as an interesting reference point. Uh, for what she is doing on this record. The "True Romance" and "Sucker" eras of her career, uh, did bring some of her biggest hits and features to date, that is true, but sonically, much of the music she was dropping around this time wasn't... very daring or even deep. At best, you could say it was catchy and of-the-time. Around the mid-2010s, though, is when Charli's music really began to push boundaries. Crossing over creatively with writers and producers from the up-and-coming PC music label. I'm talking people like Danny L Harle and EASYFUN, A.G Cook, and the late SOPHIE, who at the time were gaining quite the reputation for revitalizing a lot of Y2k-era pop aesthetics but with a hyper-futuristic, jittery sound. And our first taste of this new direction came in the form of Charli xcx's "Vroom Vroom" EP in 2016. Which some critics just did not know what to make of at the time, and while it was my EP of the year that year, I could still see how this would have turned a lot of people off if they came into Charli's music having certain expectations, given that she was a pop artist. Because "Vroom Vroom" in tone, is, at points, kind of dark, and visceral and groovy in a weird way. Campy, too, with some tracks varying so wildly from part to part that, uh, you could almost take what she was doing here as, like, a joke or novelty. However, the tracks on this EP are deadly serious. And were also a new, bold step for pop music as well as in a hot moment, for both Charli and PC Music creatively. Because at this point, I think Charli became the perfect conduit for what they were trying to channel this detailed and retro-futuristic, reconstruction of 2000s pop music, that blur the lines between the satirical, but also reverent. Meanwhile, Charli's creative chemistry with A.G and SOPHIE allowed her, I think, to experiment more and mature as a songwriter. Allowing her the freedom to drop zany bangers as well as sleek-powerful anthems. Songs with strange structures, or very unlikely features, A lot of these ideas and concepts were more or less road-tested on the mixtape she dropped back in 2017, and then in my eyes, it was all fully realized on her excellent 2019 "Charli" record. Now, over the years, as Charli has developed this new sound, her writing has offered more depth, has become more personal and intimate, especially on her pandemic album, "How I'm Feeling Now". But I think Charli's writing has grown more conceptual, too. With her presentation as this posh, English party girl on many of her songs has more or less become this exaggerated character she plays into. However, in a way, Charli's instantly recognizable sound and unique place in the pop landscape, uh, became both a blessing and a curse at the dawn of the 2020s. Because her style had gone from challenging to kind of definable with this newly-minted "hyperpop" term that was being thrown onto everybody who sounded even vaguely like her or 100gecs. And she quickly went on to strip away many of the "hyper" characteristics of her music on her next album, "Crash", working with a totally new team of producers And while I can't deny the record does feature some respectable hits, I have to ask: At what cost? Because "Crash" did very measurably have quite a bit less character than anything that Charli had dropped in recent years at the time Which brings us to today. Charli's latest album cycle here, "BRAT". Where I think she's genuinely reconnecting with the trajectory that has brought her to this point and made her a special artist to begin with. Even EASYFUN and A.G Cook are back in the mix on this production side, on a whole lot of tracks, uh, numerous others too. There are even references to A.G Cook on some of the lyrics to this record as quite a bit of meta-commentary is going on as well. You can really tell that Charli is fully embracing the impact she's had on pop music in recent years, and really using it as more of a strength than a weakness that she can be pigeon holed into. And I think that's something she can do confidently because her and A.G Cook aren't just merely trying to, y'know, revive some kind of hyperpop trend on this LP. I mean, for sure, Charli's goal and focus is to give us this autotuned, bold, and hard-hitting homage to 2000s era pop music, but this time around we have a refreshing focus on dance-pop, on EDM from that era, on electropop from that era, club bangers generally. With a pretty aggressive edge, making this LP very worthy of the title "BRAT". Because this record is meant to be danced to. And, at points, cry to. As I think Charli's writing is more mature and thoughtful than it's ever been. For one, her party girl persona takes a bit of a dark turn, or at least gets deflated a bit as she reveals that it's kind of a mask, and that she doesn't always feel like she's worthy of being there at the party or that her and the party are a bit at odds. Meanwhile, "i think about it all the time" sees Charli musing about whether or not she can continue her career in the way she currently is, while also becoming a mother, which she very clearly has interest in at some point. Skipping ahead here, it's also kind of crazy how narratively, this contrasts so hard with her going back full into party mode on the closing track, "365". Of course, there are notes of nostalgia on this album, too, that is very much in line with tracks like "1999", most notably on "Rewind", but this song specifically is more about Charli missing the older aspects of her life before the fame. Between sticky choruses on this track, she delivers her verses in this way that kinda comes off like, conflicted internal monologue, or like she's musically journaling. There are lots of tracks on this thing too that deal in love. But these songs narratively feel vastly different from previous singles like "Good Ones", for example. Tracks where historically, Charli can be seen running away from love or being a bit self-effacing and talking about how she's fucking it all up. Instead, on songs such as the really infectious singing "Talk talk to me!" as, uh, as well laughs as the very cinematic singing "Everything is romantic" Yeah, Charli can be seen accepting love and doing quite a few shoutouts to her fiancé George. But yes, between this and numerous nods to wanting to have maybe a more normal life at some point, Charli really presents some interesting internal conflicts throughout this album, which we also hear as well on tracks where she is singing about things like friendship and sharing the limelight with other women. I mean, historically Charli is very pro-woman, especially when it comes to supporting other artists