On 2006's B'Day, Beyoncé delivered a
10-song suite inspired by the unhappy-diva role she played in that year's Dreamgirls. Now she's split her
personality in two. I Am… Sasha Fierce's halves are meant to represent her deeply
felt ("I Am") and showily outrageous ("Sasha Fierce") sides, and they attempt
that feat in less than 42 minutes of music spread across two CDs. The requisite
"special edition" adds a handful of bonus tracks, but someone should still
alert the EPA—that's a lot of wasted plastic.
Fierce is also a split victory
musically. The two halves wouldn't necessarily sound better shuffled
together—both are pretty uneven. "If I Were A Boy" has boilerplate lyrics
that would fit perfectly in an old Hayley Mills vehicle, and "Broken-Hearted
Girl" sounds unfinished. But Beyoncé has a real flair for grandeur, and the
big, wide melodies of "Halo" and "Ave Maria" give her enough to work with that
it's easy to forgive a line like "Baby, I can feel your halo." And "Disappear"
features a delicate lead vocal and subtle, bewitching overdubbed harmonies.
The second half is iffier.
"Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)" is fabulous, with glowing production, a
humongous hook, and beats for weeks. But it grows more disparate from there.
"Radio" sounds like shameless target-marketing aimed at programming directors,
"Video Phone" like a Missy Elliott outtake circa 2001. "Diva" is a blatantly
obvious attempt to write a distaff "A Milli." ("Better have a six-pack in the
cooler," we're warned. Yawn.) Too bad that between the two of them, the
bifurcated Beyoncés couldn't manage a better album.