When will Rihannaâs ninth album arrive? As we continue to hope and pray that it finally lands this year, the superstar herself continues to troll us with promises of new songs dropping soon. Weâd give up and move on if it was anyone lesser than our Bajan queen but, over the last 16 years, sheâs proven that sheâs more than worth the wait. While we keep everything crossed Riri finally rewards our (im)patience before the end of 2021, letâs take a look back at her albums so far. Which one will come out on top?
âA Girl Like Meâ (2006)Â
For her second album, Rihanna didnât stray too far from the sound of predecessor âMusic Of The Sunâ. In fact, the whole record felt like she was following the same blueprint â open with an undeniable banger (âSOSâ), throw in some more understated but still good songs (âWe Rideâ, âUnfaithfulâ), and top it off with slower cuts that unfortunately donât meet the bar set by the rest of the tracklist. One of the later, âFinal Goodbyeâ, is most notable for a vocal melody that isnât a million miles away from Sealâs âKiss From A Roseâ but, sadly, doesnât come close in the cheesy classic stakes.
âMusic From The Sunâ (2005)Â
Rihanna shot out of the gates all the way back in 2005 with âMusic Of The Sunâ, a debut album that â as the title suggests â captured the sun-kissed sounds of her native Barbados. Reggaeton beats and dancehall swagger co-exist alongside pop and R&B, cementing a summery first step from a then-future superstar. The tracklist boasts Ririâs brilliant debut single âPon de Replayâ and gems like âLet Meâ and âRushâ, but itâs let down by some dreary ballads, the likes of which had a habit of cropping up in the starâs early work, acting as speed bumps for her recordsâ momentum.
‘Rated Râ (2009)Â
âLadies and gentlemen, to those among you who are easily frightened we say turn away now,â commands a booming voice on the opening track of âRated Râ. âTo those of you who think they can take it, we say welcome to the madhouse.â Rihannaâs fourth album isnât as spooky as that message might suggest, but it did take her to some dark territory she previously hadnât explored.
This was the record where Riri went rock â and even enlisted the help of Slash to do so on âRockstar 101â. Between the distorted guitars and noodling solos, though, thereâs still flashes of her more familiar sound, best exhibited on the Caribbean flavour of âRude Boyâ, which remains one of her best songs to date.
âGood Girl Gone Badâ (2007)Â
The first half of 2007âs âGood Girl Gone Badâ and its âReloadedâ repackage a year later) lulls you into a false sense of security. Itâs packed wall-to-wall with absolute jams that make you feel like youâre in for a flawless listen. It begins with the ultimate pop classic âUmbrellaâ then struts through the squelchy, sexy âPush Up On Meâ, the club-ready âDonât Stop The Musicâ, the hell hath no fury energy of âBreakinâ Dishesâ and the revving rush of âShut Up And Driveâ.
Unfortunately, though, that streak doesnât continue through the whole thing, coming to a screeching halt with the Ne-Yo collab âHate That I Love Youâ. It’s proof that itâs better to sprinkle the best songs across an album than cram them all in early â even if you add a belter like the deliciously dark âDisturbiaâ at the end when you reissue it the following year.
âUnapologeticâ (2012)
Over her career, Rihannaâs done it all â rock, R&B, pop, reggae, EDM, hip-hop and much more. On her seventh album, she shifted gears once again, dipping a toe into the left field. Of course, âUnapologeticâ features big mainstream-pleasing tracks like the euphoric âDiamondsâ or the heartbreaking âStayâ, but they collide with the likes of âNumbâ, which keeps things thrillingly lowkey and experimental, and the â80s new wave double act of âLove Without Tragedy / Mother Maryâ.
In this albumâs lyrics, Riri also took two paths â celebrating popping bottles, racking lines and general hedonism, and struggling with a toxic relationship. Sheâs been unfairly criticised for lacking emotion in her voice, but in the latter songs, thereâs feeling in abundance.
âTalk That Talkâ (2011)
Hereâs the bad gal Riri we know and love. In 2011, Rihanna was more ready to party than ever if âTalk That Talkâ is anything to go by â a record that felt built for soundtracking nights in dark corners of sticky, sweaty clubs. As well as being prime for a big night out, it also found her dialling up the sexiness to new heights â the one-two punch of âCockiness (Love It)â and âBirthday Cakeâ, followed up later by âWatch nâ Learnâ, is pure naughtiness and you can hear her revelling in it as she sings.
âTalk That Talkâ feels more coherent than a lot of Ririâs albums, even if parts do sound a little dated now. Itâs also the point where she truly got to grips with slow songs and learnt how to make them good â try listening to the poignant âFarewellâ and not feel your tear ducts getting full.
âLoudâ (2010)Â
Before her fifth album âLoudâ was released, the vice president of Def Jam compared it to Michael Jacksonâs âThrillerâ, adding that it contained âno fillersâ. A bold claim! The truth didnât totally line up with that declaration, but âLoudâ is definitely one of Rihannaâs most iconic albums. Itâs full of bangers â âS&Mâ, âOnly Girl In The Worldâ, âWhatâs My Name?â â and big name collaborations (Drake, Nicki Minaj, Eminem). Unlike the Def Jam VP said, it does contain some filler â âCalifornia King Bedâ is bland acoustic pop and âComplicatedâ’s a touch mawkish â but Riri makes up for it in the siren-laced crime thriller âMan Downâ.
âAntiâ (2016)Â
And so we come to the piĂšce de rĂ©sistance of Rihannaâs career so far. âAntiâ â her latest album, although hopefully not for much longer â is a chefâs kiss of a record, grooving hypnotically from sublime song to sublime song. Itâs her first album with no skips and, if it did end up being her last release, would be a brilliant thing to go out on (but Riri, if youâre reading, please give us at least one more).
Thereâs her patois-filled reunion with Drake on âWorkâ, the unexpected but excellent Tame Impala cover âSame Olâ Mistakesâ and the slinky âNeeded Meâ. Best of all, though, is âLove On The Brainâ, when Rihanna pours out her heart in her most emotional performance yet, crafting something thatâs perfect for wailing along to when youâre heartbroken or spinning around your room to when youâre in the throes of new love. Genius.
The post Rihanna: every album ranked and rated appeared first on NME.