Sia Furler avoids letting herself become the focus of attention, preferring instead that her work be key. Prettypuke / RCA Records
Sia Furler avoids letting herself become the focus of attention, preferring instead that her work be key. Prettypuke / RCA Records

Hidden talents: Sia Furler and her formulaic approach to creativity



Christina Aguilera's sixth album, 2010's Bionic, is not widely considered a pop landmark. Anticipation had been high for its release: over her previous two campaigns, Aguilera had gone to great lengths to successfully establish a post-teen pop narrative for herself as a serious artist with a serious vision, in the game for the long haul. News of intriguing collaborations with left-field indie names – M.I.A., Le Tigre, Peaches, Santigold – was trailed in advance, as was Aguilera's interest in electronic experimentation.

Yet when it arrived, Bionic turned out to be a wind egg: an incoherent mess of an album whose few highlights seemed to have occurred more by accident than design. Critical reaction was muted; in comparison to the multi-platinum performances Aguilera was accustomed to, its sales figures plummeted off a cliff (even taking into account overall record industry trends). It was a career-changer, but not in the good way for Aguilera: since Bionic, her inability to score a solo critical or commercial hit has continued.

Behind the scenes, though, Bionic had been the unlikely engine to kick-start another artist's career into a new, unimaginably successful phase. The Australian singer-songwriter Sia Furler had released, to modest acclaim, four albums of trip-hop-influenced pop to date, most notable for her offbeat lyrical imagery in tackling subjects such as drugs, depression and the trauma she suffered following the death of her boyfriend in a car accident. In the UK, where she lived between 1997 and 2005, she was still best known for being the laconic voice of downtempo production duo Zero 7.

In the US, where she moved after becoming frustrated with her British label's failure to promote her solo career, it was the use of her song Breathe Me on the hit TV series Six Feet Under that had gained her some renown – and the attention of major labels scouting for songwriters. Furler's five credits on Bionic include the closest the album came to spawning a legitimate hit, the sparse and uncharacteristically restrained ballad You Lost Me. Thus, one of this decade's seemingly unstoppable pop forces was reborn.

Within the industry, one often overhears Furler's name spoken with hushed reverence: her Midas touch when it comes to penning hits has made her one of the most bankable, in-demand back-room names. "This artist is responsible for over 12m track sales," gushed an October 2013 Billboard front cover breathlessly. Furler's portfolio of clients stretches across genres to encompass almost every type of current chart act: megastars Beyoncé, Rihanna and Britney Spears; brash EDM producer David Guetta; confessional rapper Angel Haze; emergent post-Disney starlet Lea Michele; cheap 'n' cheerful club MC Flo Rida; even churning out this year's World Cup song for Pitbull and Jennifer Lopez.

Yet Furler is no chameleon. The writing style that she’s built her reputation on is consistent and immediately recognisable, whether the backing track is a vulnerable piano ballad or a pumped-up dancefloor anthem.

It's also incredibly simple: Furler tends to take a single word or phrase as a foundational, nebulously "inspirational" image, hammers it home via gigantic, blustery hooks and fills in the rest of the song around it as an afterthought. Thus, Cannonball for Michele and Titanium for Guetta as metaphors for empowerment; Diamonds for Rihanna to signify romance and Radioactive for professional Rihanna understudy Rita Ora to convey lust.

Furler rarely bothers to flesh out the language she employs, which can lead to unfortunate results at times: on Spears's 2013 single Perfume, the singer wound up intoning lyrics that made her resemble a urinating dog: "I want it all over you, I'm gonna mark my territory."

It's not an approach that allows for much subtlety or nuance, and Furler has freely admitted the simplicity of her formula. A recent New York Times profile revealed that she had written Titanium in 40 minutes and Diamonds in just 14 minutes. In neither case is this surprising: both are pop at its most basic, the nuts and bolts of craftsmanship reduced to mere efficiency and left showing because it would take too much effort to hide them. And, of course, because listeners don't care: those two songs combined have sold more than 10m records worldwide. No wonder Furler cleaves so faithfully to her conveyor belt churn: is there any motivation for her to do otherwise?

The release of 1000 Forms of Fear [Amazon.com; Amazon.co.uk], her sixth solo album and first since 2010 – the year she got her big break as a pop songwriter – may provide some clues. Over the past four years, Furler has carefully cultivated a kind of anti-image: she refuses to be photographed for profile pieces, takes pains to hide or disguise her face during her promotional campaigns and reiterates her distaste for fame and recognisability whenever a journalist waves a tape recorder in her vicinity. It's certainly an effective means of piquing public interest: if actively desiring celebrity is seen as gauche and air-headed, then rejecting it must indicate depth and ­intelligence.

Such logic might be commonplace, but it's as reductive as any of Furler's metaphors. More intriguing is the question of why, despite her antipathy to the limelight, Furler feels the need to re-embark on a career in her own right, creating the need for a promotional campaign and cover features in the first place. It's tempting to think that her formulaic professional career has left her creatively unfulfilled: after all, the material she's provided for others is unrecognisable from the off-kilter songwriting of her own early career, such as the flatly mechanistic depiction of addiction on 2002's Drink to Get Drunk.

These notions are immediately dispelled. 1000 Forms of Fear opens with Chandelier, on which – yes – the title word is put to use as a heavy-handed metaphor for a party girl whose hedonism disguises her secret sadness. Chandeliers are glittery and pretty, but also brittle: do you see?

On it, Furler sounds uncannily like Rihanna. The similarity may be backwards – it’s more likely that on some of Rihanna’s biggest hits, she imitated the guide vocal originally laid down by Furler – but it still comes across like a ballad that the Bajan superstar rejected.

Moreover, Chandelier – along with Big Girls Cry, Straight for the Knife and Cellophane – is structurally indistinguishable from the material Furler pens for others: so much for holding back her more personal, experimental or meaningful material. Fair Game finds her briefly abandoning power-ballads for a subtler, more rococo arrangement, rather like Fiona Apple circa Extraordinary Machine – although with roughly one-hundredth the vocabulary.

Furler’s songwriting often feels as though it’s come together in a corporate board meeting; after a while, all one visualises is the whiteboard with her chosen word in the centre of a spider diagram. Time and again, melodic climaxes land on clichéd phrases – “beautiful pain”, “a chosen one” – and for all her quirky reputation, Furler doesn’t really do twists or surprises. Her songwriting imagination mostly extends to spending the entire running length finding ways to reiterate a basic theme rather than forming a narrative; the arrangements thud with heavily signposted emotion and ponderous piano.

And she's not above a sneaky lift or two: Burn the Pages exhumes a section of Furler's 2008 album track Lullaby for its hook, and crosses its fingers that by turning up the volume no one will notice. Elsewhere, the melodic similarity between Fire and Gasoline and Beyoncé's 2008 hit Halo is impossible to ignore.

Furler's forte these days is blunt force – and in pop, blunt force can eventually strike gold. On Free the Animal, she turns up the drama and displays real ferocity as two contrasting vocal lines spark off each other before fragmenting into stutters. The closer Dressed in Black is appropriately, and successfully, epic. But for the most part, 1000 Forms of Fear feels like being bludgeoned around the head with bombast.

Thematically, it scans as a confessional album. But despite Furler’s bio­graphy – her history of addiction and trauma – she never quite manages to convey vulnerability, or convince that she’s exorcising any demons. Her vocal timbre is as implacable as granite, despite her general distaste for diction (a tic throughout her career taken to self-parodic lengths here); Furler is one of the few singers out there capable of simultaneously slurring and blaring. Meanwhile, her songs are so functionally sturdy – you may be able to see where everything’s soldered together, where the top line and the bridge and the hook all meet, but these structures can probably withstand earthquakes – that they don’t allow for any cracks in the armour.

Ultimately, this is why latter-day Furler has hit the jackpot behind the scenes. A great pop song can be a work of genius, but this doesn't mean that all successful pop songs are works of genius. (It's also worth noting that a closer look at Furler's writing credits reveals a larger number of flop singles than one would presume of a writer so lauded.) From Diane Warren to Ryan Tedder, the music industry has always had its share of hacks who trade on professionalism, efficiency and a couple of functional tricks they deploy repeatedly. Sia Furler is one of them. A gifted performer who can frame her work in the right way – as Beyoncé did with last year's Pretty Hurts and its raw, timely video – is able to sell it beyond the clichés. On 1000 Forms of Fear, Furler finds herself unable to transcend the hollow formulae she's trapped herself in.

Alex Macpherson is a regular contributor to The Review.

The National's picks

4.35pm: Tilal Al Khalediah
5.10pm: Continous
5.45pm: Raging Torrent
6.20pm: West Acre
7pm: Flood Zone
7.40pm: Straight No Chaser
8.15pm: Romantic Warrior
8.50pm: Calandogan
9.30pm: Forever Young

The smuggler

Eldarir had arrived at JFK in January 2020 with three suitcases, containing goods he valued at $300, when he was directed to a search area.
Officers found 41 gold artefacts among the bags, including amulets from a funerary set which prepared the deceased for the afterlife.
Also found was a cartouche of a Ptolemaic king on a relief that was originally part of a royal building or temple. 
The largest single group of items found in Eldarir’s cases were 400 shabtis, or figurines.

Khouli conviction

Khouli smuggled items into the US by making false declarations to customs about the country of origin and value of the items.
According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, he provided “false provenances which stated that [two] Egyptian antiquities were part of a collection assembled by Khouli's father in Israel in the 1960s” when in fact “Khouli acquired the Egyptian antiquities from other dealers”.
He was sentenced to one year of probation, six months of home confinement and 200 hours of community service in 2012 after admitting buying and smuggling Egyptian antiquities, including coffins, funerary boats and limestone figures.

For sale

A number of other items said to come from the collection of Ezeldeen Taha Eldarir are currently or recently for sale.
Their provenance is described in near identical terms as the British Museum shabti: bought from Salahaddin Sirmali, "authenticated and appraised" by Hossen Rashed, then imported to the US in 1948.

- An Egyptian Mummy mask dating from 700BC-30BC, is on offer for £11,807 ($15,275) online by a seller in Mexico

- A coffin lid dating back to 664BC-332BC was offered for sale by a Colorado-based art dealer, with a starting price of $65,000

- A shabti that was on sale through a Chicago-based coin dealer, dating from 1567BC-1085BC, is up for $1,950

Election pledges on migration

CDU: "Now is the time to control the German borders and enforce strict border rejections" 

SPD: "Border closures and blanket rejections at internal borders contradict the spirit of a common area of freedom" 

COMPANY%20PROFILE
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EName%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20PlanRadar%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EStarted%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E2013%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ECo-founders%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EIbrahim%20Imam%2C%20Sander%20van%20de%20Rijdt%2C%20Constantin%20K%C3%B6ck%2C%20Clemens%20Hammerl%2C%20Domagoj%20Dolinsek%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EBased%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EVienna%2C%20Austria%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ESector%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3EConstruction%20and%20real%20estate%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ECurrent%20number%20of%20staff%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3E400%2B%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EInvestment%20stage%3A%20%3C%2Fstrong%3ESeries%20B%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EInvestors%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Headline%2C%20Berliner%20Volksbank%20Ventures%2C%20aws%20Gr%C3%BCnderfonds%2C%20Cavalry%20Ventures%2C%20Proptech1%2C%20Russmedia%2C%20GR%20Capital%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
if you go

The flights

Direct flights from the UAE to the Nepalese capital, Kathmandu, are available with Air Arabia, (www.airarabia.com) Fly Dubai (www.flydubai.com) or Etihad (www.etihad.com) from Dh1,200 return including taxes. The trek described here started from Jomson, but there are many other start and end point variations depending on how you tailor your trek. To get to Jomson from Kathmandu you must first fly to the lake-side resort town of Pokhara with either Buddha Air (www.buddhaair.com) or Yeti Airlines (www.yetiairlines.com). Both charge around US$240 (Dh880) return. From Pokhara there are early morning flights to Jomson with Yeti Airlines or Simrik Airlines (www.simrikairlines.com) for around US$220 (Dh800) return. 

The trek

Restricted area permits (US$500 per person) are required for trekking in the Upper Mustang area. The challenging Meso Kanto pass between Tilcho Lake and Jomson should not be attempted by those without a lot of mountain experience and a good support team. An excellent trekking company with good knowledge of Upper Mustang, the Annaurpuna Circuit and Tilcho Lake area and who can help organise a version of the trek described here is the Nepal-UK run Snow Cat Travel (www.snowcattravel.com). Prices vary widely depending on accommodation types and the level of assistance required. 

What is dialysis?

Dialysis is a way of cleaning your blood when your kidneys fail and can no longer do the job.

It gets rid of your body's wastes, extra salt and water, and helps to control your blood pressure. The main cause of kidney failure is diabetes and hypertension.

There are two kinds of dialysis — haemodialysis and peritoneal.

In haemodialysis, blood is pumped out of your body to an artificial kidney machine that filter your blood and returns it to your body by tubes.

In peritoneal dialysis, the inside lining of your own belly acts as a natural filter. Wastes are taken out by means of a cleansing fluid which is washed in and out of your belly in cycles.

It isn’t an option for everyone but if eligible, can be done at home by the patient or caregiver. This, as opposed to home haemodialysis, is covered by insurance in the UAE.

Voy!%20Voy!%20Voy!
%3Cp%3E%3Cstrong%3EDirector%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Omar%20Hilal%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3EStars%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%20Muhammad%20Farrag%2C%20Bayoumi%20Fouad%2C%20Nelly%20Karim%3Cbr%3E%3Cstrong%3ERating%3A%3C%2Fstrong%3E%204%2F5%3C%2Fp%3E%0A
Tips for job-seekers
  • Do not submit your application through the Easy Apply button on LinkedIn. Employers receive between 600 and 800 replies for each job advert on the platform. If you are the right fit for a job, connect to a relevant person in the company on LinkedIn and send them a direct message.
  • Make sure you are an exact fit for the job advertised. If you are an HR manager with five years’ experience in retail and the job requires a similar candidate with five years’ experience in consumer, you should apply. But if you have no experience in HR, do not apply for the job.

David Mackenzie, founder of recruitment agency Mackenzie Jones Middle East

Tottenham's 10 biggest transfers (according to transfermarkt.com):

1). Moussa Sissokho - Newcastle United - £30 million (Dh143m): Flop

2). Roberto Soldado - Valencia -  £25m: Flop

3). Erik Lamela - Roma -  £25m: Jury still out

4). Son Heung-min - Bayer Leverkusen -  £25m: Success

5). Darren Bent - Charlton Athletic -  £21m: Flop

6). Vincent Janssen - AZ Alkmaar -  £18m: Flop

7). David Bentley - Blackburn Rovers -  £18m: Flop

8). Luka Modric - Dynamo Zagreb -  £17m: Success

9). Paulinho - Corinthians -  £16m: Flop

10). Mousa Dembele - Fulham -  £16m: Success

UAE currency: the story behind the money in your pockets