![]() |
SOUL
After her last two albums of bracingly eclectic space-rock and prog-funk explorations, Meshell Ndegeocello pulls back sharply to engage her listeners in much closer quarters on “Weather.’’ She sings just a notch or two above a whisper throughout her ninth release, cannily drafting the listener to meet her halfway, and there’s a palpable sense of the physicality of distance between the instruments; you can practically triangulate the location of the drums in the room.
For more from BostonGlobe.com, sign up or log in below
To continue, please sign up or log in to BostonGlobe.com
Access the full articles and quality reporting of The Boston Globe at BostonGlobe.com
Sign up
Unlimited Access to BostonGlobe.com for 4 weeks for only 99¢.
Are you a Boston Globe home delivery subscriber?
Get FREE access as part of your print subscription.
BostonGlobe.com subscriber
Click to continue reading this article or to log in to BostonGlobe.com.



