Up-and-coming pop duo MKTO doesn’t reinvent the wheel but delivers worthwhile pop music on their self-titled debut album.Â
Every year, there are new pop acts that come and go. Some make a gargantuan impact and either exemplify current trends soundly or begin a new trend. Others fall by the wayside, going unnoticed. For MKTO, made up of actors/musicians Malcolm Kelly and Tony Oller, they donât reinvent popâs wheel (if there is such a thing), but they do execute popâs current trends very well. With Kelly handling the rhymes and Oller handling the soulful vocals, debut MKTO definitely shows potential.
âThank Youâ begins MKTO incredibly positive and upbeat; there isnât the slightest ounce of negativity. Calling âThank Youâ something previously unheard in pop music would be a major overstatement, but in the context of a debut album, MKTO get off to a solid start. If nothing else, the vocal grit courtesy of a soulful Tony Oller is noteworthy.
“Classic”
While âThank Youâ is a highlight, âClassicâ is even stronger. Donât go so far as to say it exemplifies its title, but it is definitely irresistible pop. Lyrics like,
âI wanna thrill you like Michael / I wanna kiss you like PrinceâŠâ
are just, scrumptious. Â Thatâs not even the chorus:
âYouâre over my head / Iâm out of my mind / thinking I was born in the wrong timeâŠyouâre one of kind living in a world gone plastic / baby youâre so classic!”
Malcolmâs pop-rap swag seals the deal
âA 70s dream and an 80s bestâŠGirl youâre timeless, just so classic.â
âGod Only Knowsâ isnât bad, though it doesnât quite live up to the bar established by âClassicâ. Still, âGod Only Knowsâ is no waste, once more benefiting from catchy lyrics, most notably on the chorus
âGod only knows /how much I need youâŠâ
A song of both emotional investment and physical desire, âGod Only Knowsâ is highly relatable to all ages.
âWhen you touch me with your body / and all that I can think is how to lose our clothesâ
âAmerican Dreamâ opens with the statement, âDo something with your lifeâ, a definite foreshadow to the positivity of the song. Where Malcolm played a minimal vocal role previously on âGod Only Knows,â âAmerican Dreamâ allows the MC to shine as well. The results are none too shabby, though again, nothing incredibly innovative or âbrand newâ. Still, hard to deny clever lyrics like
âThis ainât the same summer that you used to know / âcause Jack left Diane thirty years agoâŠâ
âCould Be Meâ brings pop-soul singer/songwriter extraordinaire into the mix, Ne-Yo. Like everything else, the results are definitely pleasant, particularly adding Ne-Yoâs smooth vocals. As expected, âCould Be Meâ is a soundly crafted pop cut with great potential to appeal to multiple audiences. Â The most surprising aspect of âCould Be Meâ is that Malcolm doesnât allow the perceived âinnocenceâ to hold him back.
âShe keep on searchinâ for the wrong man / with the iced out Cartier on hand / So mean but he look like Tarzan / little b*tch but he act real hard man.â
âForever Until Tomorrowâ cedes no momentum, as the duo continue to please. The lyrics are revolutionary, but simplistic, conveying emotions everyone experiences:
âGirl I, Iâm gonna love you / forever and ever and ever / girl I, Iâm gonna hold you / forever and ever and everâŠâ
If there was any doubt that MKTO had some rebelliousness despite their âfeel goodâ pop, âWastedâ definitely proves this â all it takes is one f-bomb, right? Honestly, âWastedâ is the edgiest song of the sunny debut and the sole ballad until this point.
âAm I crazy to think that I could be in love when it all ends up,â
Oller sings on the chorus.
ââŠIâd give you my heart, but Iâd just f*ck it up / weâd end up, weâd end up wasted / la la laâŠâ
The sharp song manages to reference âJack and coke smokinâ on the fire escapeâ as well as the religiously skeptical lyric
âIf I believed in God Iâd pray, to God Iâd pray.â
Maybe it wonât appeal to those who enjoy everything being utopian, but personally, a little edge never hurt anyone.
Atonement arrives on âHeartbreak Holidayâ, in which a quicker tempo and bright sound returns to MKTO. Even so, itâs pretty safe to say that MKTO doesnât enjoy February 14:
â(Baby I hate) I freaking hate / (Valentines Day) Valentines Day / (Iâm feeling this pain) It cuts like a blade when I think about youâŠâ
Even through Ollerâs soulful disdain for being without his baby, the listener is treated with another winner overall.
The opening of âNowhereâ is certainly suggestiveâŠum, just plum freaky.
âBreakfast in bed, bacon and eggs⊠she keeps me fed / breast and some legs / well done, yeah, well doneâ
It is what it is⊠hey MKTO are comprised of two twenty-something guys â what do you expect? Ultimately, MKTO arenât going ânowhereâ anyways, though one has to question if itâs merely the emotional benefits of the relationship⊠just saying!
Penultimate cut âNo More Second Chancesâ opens lovely, with Oller displaying the sheer beauty of his pipes on the chorus.
âNo more second chances, no more plastic lies / no more giving me reasons to make me have to say goodbye.”
It follows with quasi-rap/spoken word by Malcolm, who gets a slight change of pace with the production to progress the cut. Sure, Malcolm goes a bit stupid, but the reference to Waka Flocka and a variant on the f-bomb does capture oneâs attention:
âShe trying to be my flame like Waka Flocka with the focka.â
Jessica Ashley guest,  shining, providing another contrasting voice to the mix and eliminating any sense of predictability. In regards to the production, âNo More Second Chancesâ works well. Â
Closing cut âGoodbye Songâ puts the sentiment of âgoodbyeâ out there explicitly:
âYa Iâmma put your shit out on the lawn / leave my heart and take your bone / thereâs nothing left to say so long / this is your goodbye song.â
Well, at least the album ends with a bang.
Final Thoughts
Overall, MKTO is an enjoyable, solidly conceived pop album. Like many of the albums it competes with, the rub is its lack of big-time innovation. Though MKTO isnât particularly innovative or strikingly different from other pop/hip-hop hybrid acts, itâs still one of the better albums using this style. There are no misses, just certain numbers hitting home more than others. There is room for improvement, as there is with a number of artists and bands, but MKTO certainly get off to a good and speedy start.
Gems:âThank You,â âClassic,â âCould Be Me,â âForever Until Tomorrowâ& âWastedâ

