Alison Goldfrapp's voice, songwriting, and very name are so intertwined with her wide-ranging body of work with
Will Gregory as
Goldfrapp that it makes establishing her identity as a solo artist uniquely difficult. Fortunately, her first album on her own proves she's up to the challenge. Instead of striving to make a deeply serious set of songs -- as many bandmembers do when they go solo -- on
The Love Invention, she offers her listeners a chance to dance their cares away with some of the most direct and euphoric music of her career. The record's ecstatic grooves celebrate her musical roots and dance music itself as much as any relationship. Disco has always been a vital element of
Alison Goldfrapp's work, and it provides some of
The Love Invention's most glittering highlights: "Gatto Gelato" is a saucy, Italo disco-flavored standout, while "The Beat Divine" takes a cosmic, slow-motion approach that's so hazily sensual, it seems to have its own fog machine. On "Fever," a four-on-the-floor house beat brings the track -- and the album -- to a pulsing peak. Though the styles and influences may be familiar,
Alison Goldfrapp takes distinctly different vantage points on them here than she does with
Goldfrapp. Neither as dramatic nor as animated as the extremes of her work with
Gregory,
The Love Invention casts a consistently transporting spell of rejuvenation and seduction on songs like the
Claptone collaboration "Digging Deeper Now," where
Alison Goldfrapp sighs "Your colors/Breathe life back into me" over a swelling synth bass. Despite contributions from producers that also include
Richard X,
Paul Woolford, and
James Greenwood, the whole album flows as smoothly as an artfully mixed DJ set. Of course, a passing resemblance to
Goldfrapp's work is inevitable. Some of
The Love Invention's sleekly linear tracks, such as "NeverStop," could almost pass for dance remixes of the duo's songs. Hints of
Supernature's and
Head First's elated dance and synth pop make themselves known, most notably on "In Electric Blue," a radiant ballad that recalls "Number One" as well as
Alison Goldfrapp's larger talent for grounding her sonic fantasies in real feeling. Similarly, she transforms the prosaic into the magical on the album's sparkling title track, which was partly inspired by her use of hormone replacement therapy for menopause. On "So Hard So Hot," she fuels its
Donna Summer-esque disco inferno with climate change fears. As
The Love Invention unfolds, she changes things up while upholding the album's gliding flow, adding narrative drama with "Hotel"'s tale of fleeting passions and balancing "Subterfuge"'s ethereal tones with trap-inspired beats.
Goldfrapp's mix of everything and anything is a large part of the duo's charm, but the way
Alison Goldfrapp focuses on her legacy as a dance and pop music innovator on
The Love Invention feels just as authentic. Her respect for the power of the groove results in one of her most cohesive projects, and one that makes the dance floor that much classier with its presence. ~ Heather Phares