Heartbreak Weather review: Niall Horan ticks the boxes but doesn't cause a storm
Ed Power reviews the second album from former One Direction star Niall Horan.
[rating]3[/rating]
Post-boyband life can be tough if you arenāt the big heartthrob in the line-up. Harry Styles, the most charismatic member of One Direction, will be fine, no matter what it does.
But what about Niall, Zayn, Liam and erm⦠the other guy?
Horan, the token Irishman in the line-up, isnāt taking chances. His second post-One D album is piled high with the sort of slurpy ballads that turned his former group into the biggest force in pop.
One Direction fans will love it, which was presumably the idea.
That is in contrast to Styles who seems keen on leaving his former life as a spiky-haired heartthrob as far behind as possible.
No such affectations trouble Mullingar-born Horan, who is in upbeat fettle across a happy go lucky collection of mid-tempo break-up stompers.
He certainly canāt be accused of resting on his pop laurels.
His first LP, Flicker, was a grab-bag of whispery campfire dirges. Here by contrast, itās all pop all the way. This is announced with early single āNice to Meet Yaā.
The laws of pop tell us we should always be wary of a track with āYaā in the lyrics. To his credit Horan carries off the tuneās swaggering splicing of guitars and play-list friendly beats.
There are lots big blowsy ballads too, presumably informed by his split from actress/ singer/ Transformers star Hailee Stenfield.
Piano-powered āPut A Little Love One Meā, in particular, is an opportunity for him to challenge his vocal limitations.

And he adds a spritz of soul on āCross Your Mindā, which sounds like the work of an artist who has been spending quality time with George Michaelās Greatest Hits (and has Pharrell Williams on speed-dial).
No wheels are reinvented. Nor does Styles need to fret about his status as One Direction Alpha Dog. However as a steady as she goes adjunct to Flicker, Heartbreak Weather ticks the boxes.
It doesnāt cause a storm. But it will leave One Direction diehards slightly shaken and stirred.

