Reflecting her years as a music industry veteran,
Sia Furler took a self-aware, practical approach to her return to the spotlight. She recorded her comeback album,
1000 Forms of Fear, to get out of her publishing contract; its acclaim led to
This Is Acting, a collection of songs originally written for -- and rejected by -- clients such as
Adele,
Rihanna, and
Beyonce. But as the album title hints, there's more going on here than recycling. In a way,
Furler is acting when she writes songs to fit the images these artists portray, and her own interpretations of them add another layer of theatrical distance. This isn't necessarily a bad thing -- she initially shopped "Chandelier" to
Rihanna and
Beyonce before keeping it for herself and imbuing it with the unique frailty that made it a smash hit.
Sia's skill at crafting songs full of drama and vulnerability that feel real, no matter how loud they get, is in full force on
This Is Acting, particularly its first two tracks. Originally intended for
Adele -- another master of huge-yet-genuine-sounding songs -- "Bird Set Free" and "Alive" are filled with wounded empowerment and vocal acrobatics that sound just as powerful (if less bombastic) coming from
Sia. Though she returns to the intimate songwriting of her pre-pop career on "One Million Bullets" -- the lone song
Furler wrote for herself -- many of
This Is Acting's most interesting and successful moments find
Sia taking on more unexpected roles. A pair of songs intended for
Rihanna let her show off a more lighthearted side: the spare, reggae-tinged pulse of "Cheap Thrills" echoes
Major Lazer's "Lean On" (yet another
Rihanna reject), but a backing chorus of what sounds like alien children reinforces that this is a
Sia song, while "Reaper" lets her explore a more easygoing version of her seize-the-day anthems. Given that
Furler didn't originally plan to make these songs her own originally, it's impressive that
This Is Acting works as well as it does -- its meta-pop is another reminder of how cleverly
Sia brings her experiments into the mainstream. ~ Heather Phares