Categories: AlbumsReviews

Amy Winehouse – Lioness: Hidden Treasures

Published by

The first posthumous dip into Amy Winehouse’s vaults is a mishmash, but its best moments remind you of her huge voice and biting charisma

This is a sad record. A grab bag of outtakes, unreleased tracks, demos, covers and song sketches, these recordings feel like a gut punch. They remind you, first and foremost, of that voice ”“ one of pop music’s most instantly recognizable vocal imprints, a sound that leapt out of your speakers and seized you by the ears. Here, as always, Winehouse’s singing is both raggedy and dramatic, winking and insouciant, full of high drama and a breezy sense of play ”“ sometimes all those things at the same time.

Listen to the deliciously easeful crooning in “Our Day Will Come,” a reggae-fied reworking of a doo-wop chestnut, recorded in 2002. Or listen to “Half Time,” also from 2002, a sultry ode to the pleasure of sultry music ”“ “When the beat kicks in/Everything falls into place” ”“ with Winehouse conjuring a Sunday-noontime-light-slanting-through-the-blinds vibe over a luscious 1970s jazz-soul groove. Then there’s “Between the Cheats,” from Winehouse’s aborted attempts at recording a third album with producer Salaam Remi in 2008. An old-fashioned 6/8 R&B ballad, it perfectly distills Winehouse’s marriage of classic soul style and goth-barfly smuttiness.

Sadder still, what’s not here. Winehouse was a talent in formation. Her debut album, the jazzy retro-soul Frank (2003), was promising but flawed: her appealing mix of London homegirl brassiness and classic-pop chops was undermined by her overly mannered singing and an unsure songwriting touch. On Back to Black (2006), she turned from sass to melodrama ”“ with help from producer Mark Ronson and a pile of old Shangri-Las 45s ”“ and recorded wrenchingly beautiful (and funny, and potty-mouthed) songs about love and addiction. But she was still finding her feet as a singer and a songwriter when she died. On Lioness, there are charming reminders of what was: the stirringly stately “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow” cover, an alternate version of “Tears Dry.” But it’s hard not to believe that Winehouse died with her best work in front of her. We’ll never hear those records, and the silence is deafening.

Key Tracks: “Between the Cheats,” “Our Day Will Come”

Recent Posts

Travis Scott Details the Burning of Troy in ‘The Odyssey’ Trailer, Revealing Surprise Role

In theaters July 17, the film features Matt Damon, Tom Holland, Anne Hathaway, Robert Pattinson,…

January 27, 2026

Inside the New Charity Album Starring Arctic Monkeys, Olivia Rodrigo, Damon Albarn, and More

HELP(2) will raise funds for War Child UK, which helps children affected by global conflict

January 27, 2026

Sly Dunbar, Reggae and Dancehall’s Rhythm King, Dead at 73

With bassist Robbie Shakespeare, Dunbar recorded and produced countless hit records, and played a crucial…

January 27, 2026

Billie Eilish and James Cameron Delay ‘Hit Me Hard and Soft’ Concert Film: ‘Worth the Wait’

The film, originally scheduled for March 20, will now arrive on May 8 as they…

January 27, 2026

Kanye West Apologizes for Antisemitic Outbursts: ‘I Lost Touch With Reality’

In a full-page Wall Street Journal ad, Ye spoke about his battle with bipolar disorder,…

January 27, 2026

Mother Mother Promise to ‘Come Out With a Bang’ at Lollapalooza India

The Canadian rock act’s co-founder and vocalist guitarist Ryan Guldemond talks about their recent album…

January 24, 2026