![]() ![]() The beats, the hooks and especially her voice - a Bjork-inflected trill made to sound colossal through advances in digital recording technology and the sheer power of Goulding’s lungs. Goulding recently described “Delirium” as her “big pop album,” and it’s safe to assume that she is talking about its sound as much as its intended reach. Because while all contemporary pop stars are required to sing along with computer-generated rhythms, Goulding might be the only one who sounds as if she is singing from inside the machine. This is perplexing and unfair, especially when it’s so easy to hear Goulding as the more significant vocalist. Yet Adele has been heralded as our planet’s unanimous champion of all that is good and tasteful while Goulding has been roundly dismissed as a humanoid conduit of radio piffle. And they both have new albums filled with songs they built with the help of pop music’s current master architects, Max Martin and Greg Kurstin. They’re both charming late-20s ladies with British accents, global ambitions, golden hair and golden voices. ![]() Ellie Goulding will not sell 3 million records this week, but aside from that, she has a lot in common with Adele. ![]()
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