Album Review: Butterfly

CNN
September 18, 1997
A soaring celebration of Mariah Carey's new album


The moon and the stars were out Tuesday night at New York's Pier 59 Studios to celebrate the release of Mariah Carey's new album, "Butterfly." Models Tyson Beckford and Beverly Johnson brought the glamour, while Pras of the Fugees brought the praise for Carey's new release.

"Oh yeah, she's definitely going to sell some more records this time around. It's got new flavors. It's different. There's a twist to it," Pras says.

Pras predictions appear to already be coming true.

The album's first single, "Honey," debuted at number one on Billboard's Hot 100 chart the week of its release. The success of the single follows in the footsteps of her 1995 release, "Daydream," which sold more than 7 million copies and generated three consecutive number one singles.

Carey, 27, teamed up with producers Sean "Puffy" Combs and David Morales on her new album. With it's hip-hop influence and sweeping ballads, Carey calls "Butterfly" a slightly new take on her established musical style.

"I don't think it's that much of a departure from what I've done in the past. I think I've covered the gamut of what I do, and I don't want people to be misled into thinking that it's an entirely new thing and I've gone entirely left-field," she said.

Carey's collaborators include some of hip-hop's biggest names, such as Combs, Dru Hill, and members of Bone Thugs n' Harmony. Yet the CD, with its 10 ballads, is not exactly bombastic. Carey calls it "pretty mellow."

Carey went a little wild in the video for "Honey," which depicts Carey as a Jane Bond-type. Aside from one instance, Carey did not use a body double in the video.

"It's all me. I was like Action Jane frolicking up and down Puerto Rico," she said.

Carey's husband, Sony Music Entertainment President Tony Mottola, also attended the party. Despite their recent separation, they were seen working amicably at the event. Carey insists that the situation is fine.

"It's called being grown-up about the situation and moving on," she said.

Carey will be touring overseas in January, and hopes to hit the United States after that tour. She still wants to try acting in films as well.

"I'm happy about it," she says.



Entertainment Weekly, September 19, 1997
Winging It
By David Browne
Rating: B-


The girl -- in this case, Mariah Carey -- can't help it. She yearns to be a funky, Jeep-cruising hip-hop queen, but her lifestyle and financial trappings constantly remind us that she'll never really be one of them -- or us. On ''Babydoll,'' the creamy-smooth come-on at the center of Butterfly, she positions herself as just another lovesick homegirl waiting for the object of her affections to call. ''Zoning out thinking about/ You and me between the sheets,'' she purrs over a comforter-soft slow groove -- imagine En Vogue just waking up. This homegirl, however, is hanging out in her ''hotel suite'' and calling her service for messages.

Taking a sip of wine, presumably delivered by the hotel restaurant, she sings breathlessly that tonight she's going to ''leave my cell phone turned on.''

Whether or not her fans will be able to relate to such a penthouse-culture setting, the song nonetheless epitomizes the complex creature that is Butterfly. From its phalanx of R&B and rap guest stars to its I-will-survive lyrics (which allude to her recent separation from her husband, Sony CEO Tommy Mottola), the album is clearly intended as Carey's declaration of independence, musically and personally. She's recently been spotted nightclubbing with rappers, and ''Honey,'' the album's mildly fatback first single, was coproduced by current R&B hitmaker Sean ''Puffy'' Combs. You're prepared for a collection on which Carey finally breaks free of her adult-contemporary chains and gets down. Instead, she sounds like anyone striking out on his or her own -- caught between old and new habits and taking cautious baby steps into the future.

Much like Janet Jackson's even more libidinous janet., Butterfly aims to present its maker as a fully grown woman dipping into a new, sexually liberated lifestyle. The title song, a slice of florid pop gospel, explores the old if-you-love-someone-set-her-free theme; in ''Close My Eyes,'' Carey paints herself as ''a wayward child/with the weight of the world'' who worries ''maybe I grew up/a little too soon.'' It isn't a reach to interpret these songs as describing life with the reportedly controlling Mottola.

As if flaunting her newfound independence, Carey then spends other songs flirting and reveling: ''Cover me with velvet kisses/Rock me on and on,'' she salivates in ''Babydoll,'' while ''Fourth of July'' describes a romantic walk in the park (and rain) straight out of a Hallmark-card photo. She sings these songs not in her trademark belting style but in a soft, girlish coo. Carey is still a vocal grandstander capable of turning all into a six-syllable word. Yet for most of the album she keeps her notorious octave-climbing chops at bay. Showing some admirable restraint, she nestles herself into the downy-soft beats of ''The Roof'' and ''Honey.'' In ''Breakdown,'' she demonstrates she can match the staccato, lite-reggae phrasing of her guests, two members of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony.

So far, so good (unless you're Mottola, that is -- between those lyrics and the album's sex-kitten cover photo, Butterfly actually succeeds in making you feel sorry for him). Butterfly paints a semi-clear portrait of Carey's new life, but has she truly started anew musically? Piano-fronted ballads still dominate, and even when she's working with producers like Combs, the results are mild, mid-tempo grooves that simmer but never boil over. Tracks burble along, verses indistinguishable from choruses, like one big watercolor painting. Others are simply derivative: Prince's ''The Beautiful Ones'' is reduced to a slushy vocal showcase for Carey and new-jack crooners Dru Hill, and ''My All,'' with its gently plucked guitars, is the best Babyface track Babyface never produced.

Oddly, Carey's attempt at musical maturity ends up backfiring. The very-slow-jam grooves have an intimacy lacking in her previous work. But the arrangements -- especially the oozing vocal harmonies on many tracks -- mute the impact of her lyrics. How are we supposed to connect with Carey's renewal when we can barely understand what she's singing? The softer Carey sings, the less singular her phrasing becomes -- it's as if she's so accustomed to power singing that she has to relearn nuance. Butterfly is undeniably pleasant, with little of the all-conquering bombast usually associated with Carey. But it's also the last thing anyone would have expected from her: blandly self-effacing.

As sincere as Carey may be about her appreciation of urban music and culture, some things never change. The most distinctive tracks on Butterfly are still its gushy, sky-high ballads, like the you've-got-a-friend placebo ''Whenever You Call.'' One of them, ''Close My Eyes'' (written with her longtime collaborator, Walter Afanasieff), has a late-night moodiness that effortlessly attains the aural sophistication she clearly wants. It isn't the best song for post-party cruising, but sometimes, the girl can't help that, either.



Rolling Stone, November 5, 1997
By Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Rating:


On what is something of a transitional album, the recently separated Mariah Carey moves still further away from the warmed-over Whitney Houston of Carey's early recordings and firmly into the milieu of modern, hip-hop-inflected R&B. The surprise is that she does it rather well.

Carey couldn't have wished for a better start than "Honey," the latest in the apparently unending series of Sean "Puffy" Combs-produced chart toppers this year. Built around the piano riff from the World's Famous Supreme Team's infectious 1984 hit, "Hey DJ," it's an undeniably catchy pop record that revamps her sound and image.

It's not as if Carey has totally dispensed with her old saccharine, Houston-style balladry. The tracks co-produced by the singer with her accomplice Walter Afanasieff mostly conform to the slushy formulas of past hits like "Hero." But the predominant mood of "Butterfly" is one of coolly erotic reverie. "We floated away," she sings on "Fourth of July," "delicately lay entwined/In an intimate daze." On "Babydoll," a track co-written with Missy Elliott, Carey finds herself "zoning out, thinking about/You and me between the sheets."

Essentially, Carey has found a comfortable perch between the music of Puff Daddy and Babyface. Guests on "Butterfly" include Dru Hill, who duets on a version of the Artist's "The Beautiful Ones," and Wish and Krayzie Bone, who lend their inimitable vocal interpolations to "Breakdown." All very 1997. Indeed, when the grand piano and drum kit make their entrance on the closing.



All Music Guide
By Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Rating:


Upon its release, Butterfly was interpreted as Mariah Carey's declaration of independence from her ex-husband (and label president) Tommy Mottola, and to a certain extent, that's true. Butterfly is peppered with allusions to her troubled marriage and her newfound freedom, and the music is supposed to be in tune with contemporary urban sounds instead of adult contemporary radio. Nevertheless, it feels like a Mariah Carey album, which means that it's a collection of hit singles surrounded by classy filler. What is surprising about Butterfly is the lack of up-tempo dance-pop. Apart from the Puffy Combs-produced "Honey," Butterfly is devoted to ballads, and while they are all well-crafted, many of them blend together upon initial listening. Subsequent plays reveal that Carey's vocals are sultrier and more controlled than ever, and that helps "Butterfly," "Break Down," "Babydoll," and the Prince cover, "The Beautiful Ones," rank among her best; also, the ballads do have a stronger urban feel than before. Even though Butterfly doesn't have as many strong singles as Daydream, it's one of her best records, illustrating that Carey is continuing to improve and refine her music, which makes her a rarity among her '90s peers.



Slant Magazine
By Rich Juzwiak, 2004
Rating:


With her hypersonic wail, dewy-eyed platitudes, and accompanying deaf-dumb interpretive gestures, Mariah Carey was always a bit camp. But before 1997's Butterfly, we had no idea how fucking weird the woman was. Her sixth studio album came on the heels of her split from Tommy Mottola, who, to hear her tell it, shoved Mariah the b-girl and her music into the gray area that made her such a huge commercial success. The first seven years of Carey's pop reign ingeniously and maniacally avoided commitment to one musical format, the philosophical and commercial epitome of the blurred soul that owned the first half (or make that all) of the 1990s.

And blurry is how Carey appeared, at least early on, when what was most apparent about the woman's psyche was her work ethic (she averaged almost an album a year during the first half of the decade—an amazing feat compared to her diva counterparts). Mariah the workhorse, per the liner notes of her albums, was co-producing and writing most of her material. Maybe in a bid to be as inoffensive (hence, appealing) as possible, she sang little about the specifics of being herself and only occasionally let on about her supposed first love, R&B. 1995's Daydream, though, could have been called Caterpillar, what with its pronounced sampling and beats that actually bounced. But it came with a catch: Carey's over-emoting, her uncompromising voice that announced her music as primarily vocal and not the same equal-opportunity mesh of words and sounds that defines hip-hop-soul (looking at you and blowing kisses, Mary J.). But for someone whose mouth was always gaping, Carey was surprisingly tight-lipped, even when signing off Daydream with her version of a "fuck you" to the haters: "They'll never know the real me."

Oh, but we'd get to see a whole lot more of Carey on Butterfly (the cleavage! the bellybutton!), an album obsessed with the notion of identity and carving one out for its central character. We're greeted by Mariah the burgeoning hoochie moaning "Oh, oh," as the album begins. Via "Honey," Butterfly immediately presents itself as an awakening, both sensually (witness the elusive, cummy imagery: "And it's just like honey/When your love comes over me/Oh baby I've got a dependency/Always strung out for another taste of your honey") and musically (Sean then-"Puffy" Combs bases the track around samples of Treacherous 3's "The Body Rock" and World Famous Supreme Team's "Hey DJ," while Q-Tip programs the spunky beats). Carey and her producers had sampled liberally before—1993's "Dreamlover" incorporated the Emotions' "Blind Alley" as sweetly as possible while Daydream's "Fantasy" unabashedly replicated Tom Tom Club's "Genius Of Love." Though the Bad Boy (and best) version of "Fantasy" featured the late Old Dirty Bastard, there was no mistaking the song for mom-friendly pop, thanks to Carey's over-the-top belting (Combs wisely did away with the album version's screechy chorus and replaced it with a melodic hook from "Genius"). "Honey" finds Carey cum-hungry (or something) in virgin territory, playing it cool (or, as cool as she can) for the kids and not worrying about what moms might think.

But not for long. The title track reteams Mariah the injured with partner-in-schlock Walter Afanasieff, the man responsible for co-writing and co-producing much of her pre-Butterfly output (not to mention over half of Butterfly itself). The agonizingly slow "Butterfly," with its predictably soaring chorus and if-it-comes-back-it-was-meant-to-be message, would have been ignorable tripe. Here, it's a show for the peeping. Echoes of her newly failed relationship with Mottola bounce off the gospelly song's cheap stained glass and then garble so that it sounds like some insane document of Stockholm Syndrome. "Blindly I imagined I could/Keep you under glass," coos Carey, but surrounded is exactly how she felt by Mottola's iron fist (she has referred to the Bedford, New York mansion they shared as "Sing Sing" because that's what she did there and prison is how it felt). She even goes beyond empathy—it's as though Carey's singing what her own self-professed eighth-grader spirit wants to hear: "Spread your wings and prepare to fly/For you have become a butterfly/Fly abandonedly into the sun."

It isn't just subject matter that elevates "Butterfly" above Carey's usual melodrama. Carey's vocal delivery and her willingness to experiment with it helped define the album, so it's only appropriate that its title track is the first of many to showcase Carey's much-debated "whisper voice." The relatively high and thin register that she sings in when not belting (and that's often) is sometimes cited as a sign of a waning vocal prowess. But it could be the most important of Butterfly's changes, as it marks the first time that Mariah the vocalist seems consistently real. She's not a robodiva and she isn't even on autopilot. She's utterly soulful. We often think of guttural growling and belted vocal runs as the height of soulfulness (thanks, no doubt, to gospel's values, which gave us the notion of soul in the first place), but when Carey sounds almost hoarse and entirely heady, she's just about tangible.

"Honey" and "Butterfly" together exemplify the abrupt gear shifting that appreciating Mariah the artist requires. Butterfly's pop brilliance doesn't always come easy, where detecting it depends on the audience's newfound ability to apply Carey's pop life to her pop music (the divorce shaded her in and put some real-life behind her on-record misery). Like very good camp, Butterfly requires work. Russ Meyer knew and Paul Verhoeven sometimes remembers that the most enthralling camp is that which doesn't always announce itself as such (ahem, John Waters), but which alternately winks knowingly and blinks blindly at the consumers, awarding them the decision of what's good, what's bad, and what's so-bad-it's-good. Though Butterfly does a lot more blinking, there's a similar mechanism at work that's actually inherent to all of Carey's music, since all unbearable sappiness, to varying degrees, counteracts with her extremely listenable, extraordinary voice. Butterfly heightens the effect as Carey swings wildly between emotional extremes (cool and, to use one of a few ten-cent words Carey drops throughout the album, fervid), between mushy subject matter and specificity. Carey's means may not be as astute as those of Meyer and Verhoeven, but her end has the head-spinning effect that the aforementioned auteurs ideally achieve: entertainment by any means necessary.

Butterfly is too eager to please for it to merely settle into guilty pleasuredom. Yes, it's incredibly slow and the flutter turns to a crawl during the album's final third, which becomes audacious with a how-slow-can-you-go cover of Prince's "The Beautiful Ones" with Dru Hill. But a moderate pace more often suits Carey, who's less prone to running (thematically and vocally) to the bigger picture during Butterfly's wonderful middle. Little more than yearning, kissing, and remembering happens during the course of "The Roof," a rough-enough R&B revision of Mobb Deep's "The Shook Ones." But lyrically Mariah the writer is vivid, sometimes shockingly clever (rhyming "liberated" with "Moet" is a stroke of genius).

Butterfly peaks exactly where it should, with its sixth track, "Breakdown." It's the song of Carey's career, where the lyrical strokes are as broad and obvious as they are naked. The song's central question, "So what do you do when/Somebody you're so devoted to/Suddenly just stops loving you?" is so naïve and bare, it's almost as devastating as a child asking hard questions about death. The song finds Carey paired with half of Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Krayzie Bone and Wish Bone. Mariah the chanter flawlessly adapts to their singsong style, largely boxing her multi-octave range into a sly, hypnotic melody so that when she really wails at the end, you really feel it. As with "The Roof," Carey lunges toward musical maturity by embracing, not shunning hip-hop. This is the height of her elegance and maybe hip-hop-soul's, too.

The comedown after "Breakdown," and the last in the album's mid-game rally, is "Babydoll," Carey's sole stab at Timbaland-styled skitter balladry to date. No longer able to seem nonchalant about the breakup that surfaces repeatedly throughout the album, Carey wants to be smothered once again ("Wrap me up nice and tight/Love me all through the night"). And here Mariah the confessor explicitly reveals what post-"Honey" Butterfly lacks: "I wanna get intimate/But you're not within my reach."

A quiet storm album without the fucking, Butterfly is, above everything, idiosyncratic. Here, like never before, we're asked to take Carey for what she is: unabashedly chaste, but ultra femme; unrelentingly precious, but undeniably vulnerable. It's this perceived waffling that makes Carey such a divisive pop artist (certainly the girliness doesn't help either, since femmephobia is perhaps the status quo's least-questioned fear). And it's Mariah the inconsistent that makes Butterfly so ultimately fascinating and endearing. Viewing her character from a completely different angle on the album's weepy last track, "Outside," Carey observes that she's "always somewhat out of place everywhere/Ambiguous/Without a sense of belonging to touch/Somewhere halfway/Feeling there's no one completely the same." Whether she's talking about her mixed-race heritage, her career, or both, it's the old Carey one-two, a seemingly unhappy ending fueled by the know-thyself philosophy that otherwise makes Butterfly joyous. As Carey's most bizarre moment of self-celebration, it's also a triumph, since it could only make sense coming from Mariah the person.




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