Rihanna's ANTI is a creative, gloriously confused byproduct of the streaming era

In a musical landscape that prioritizes streaming singles, a pop princess throws us a curve ball

Rihanna doing what she wants.
(Image credit: REUTERS)

"I know I could be more creative," Rihanna wails on "Higher," the raw, soulful penultimate track on her new album ANTI. But listen carefully through the long-awaited studio album — Rihanna's eighth and her first since 2012's Unapologetic — and you'll be left with quite a different impression.

ANTI officially dropped on Tidal late Wednesday after being accidentally uploaded to the streaming service's servers. Taken as a whole, it is a collection of artistic risks that showcases Rihanna's sheer vocal talent. While these risks don't always pay off — "it's more of an exercise in rebranding," The Telegraph quipsANTI's experimentalism is a refreshing product of the music industry's uncertain future and the rise of the streaming era.

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Samantha Rollins

Samantha Rollins is TheWeek.com's news editor. She has previously worked for The New York Times and TIME and is a graduate of Northwestern University's Medill School of Journalism.