Michael Cragg 

Shawn Mendes: Shawn review – a candid, stripped-back return

Regrouping after some time out, the Canadian singer-songwriter adopts a sparser, folk rock approach, yet shines best in honeyed pop mode
  
  

Shawn Mendes onstage at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, August 2024.
‘Emotional connection’: Shawn Mendes onstage at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, August 2024. Photograph: Charlotte Rainville

Five years ago, Canadian superstar Shawn Mendes was riding high; two Grammy nominations preceded a sold-out world tour and a lucrative gig as the face – and bulge – of Calvin Klein underwear. A tepid fourth album, 2020’s quickly forgotten Wonder, and a mental health break now finds Mendes steadily rebuilding from scratch.

Mainly eschewing the galloping pop-rock of old, Shawn’s 12 short tracks, including a superfluous cover of Leonard Cohen’s authenticity lodestar Hallelujah, focus on lilting, unadorned folk-rock. Pensive opener Who I Am, which picks over the fallout from his time away with candour, is stripped right back to acoustic guitar and distant backing vocals. The Mountain, meanwhile, follows a similar route but is memorable mainly for referencing Mendes’s much-discussed sexuality.

Mendes’s honeyed pop croon doesn’t really lend itself to such a stark light, however, with the bluesy Nobody Knows veering towards the polished boom-bap of the Lumineers rather than anything grittier. It’s a shame, because when he leans into that pop nous on excellent single Why Why Why and the beautiful 70s AOR of Heart of Gold – about the death of a childhood friend – he makes a stronger emotional connection.

Watch a video for Heart of Gold by Shawn Mendes.
 

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