In a world of illegal downloading and instant gratification, there is little appreciation for the concept of a full length album. Says R&B recording artist Janelle Monáe's management team:

"The concept of the suite release was inspired by the observation that the youth of the iPod generation no longer buy or listen to entire albums. They listen to playlists. They grab their favorite three to four songs from a particular album, add those to a playlist, and then discard the rest of the album like yesterday's news."

For that reason, Monáe's team has decided to opt for a "suite" collection, quarterly releases that feature a small sampling of tracks juicy enough both to hold the public's interest and to leave them begging for more. Last Tuesday saw the release of Monáe's first collection, Metropolis: The Chase Suite.

The album is a concept centered around the fictitious Metropolis, a world based on the 1929 silent film bearing the same name. The conflict? Cindi Mayweather, an Alpha Platinum 9000 android, has committed the intolerable crime of falling in love with a human. Now the chase is on among the aliens of Metropolis to find and destroy Mayweather's cyber-soul. Still following? Good, now hang on a bit longer.

The album opens with "The March of the Wolfmasters," a cheeky intergalactic announcement that formally commences the hunt for Cindi Mayweather. As soon as the track fades out, the album surges into its full element: "I-I-I'm an alien from outer space," Monáe stutters into the opening of "Violet Stars Happy Hunting!!!" before the operatic backing vocals crash against an unstoppably catchy guitar-synth riff. "Y'all better shut up," she suddenly announces mid-track, as the song moves swiftly into the album's surging, organ-fueled soul fest, "Many Moons," which is reminiscent of a Gnarls Barkley track on speed.

After "Cybertronic Purgatory," the album's sobering and operatically vocoded halfway mark, "Sincerely, Jane" supplies a resurgence of energy. Monáe pierces the airwaves along with spirited horn flourishes in this swinging bossa nova-drenched burst of sound. It's a clash of genres, wandering among elements of motown, jazz and classic pop standards. The follow up, however, fails to maintain that energy. "Mr. President" is an uneven if not misplaced political skewering that doesn't quite pack the same punch as the rest of the album. It's a valiant effort and a beautiful Motown mid-tempo, but the lyrical content feels more like a misguided step than a meaningful contribution to the suite.

Nevertheless, she redeems herself in the end with the climactic "Sing," a mellow ballad that captures Monáe's inner Judy Garland with emotion-wrought delivery as she croons: "Smile, though your heart is aching. Smile, ... even though it's breaking." It's both fractured and haunting, similar to something that might have been found on Amy Winehouse's Frank. "Thank you, thank you very much," she whispers as the track winds down, making it clear that we've already touched back down to Earth.

Employing a rich, soulful sound and heaps of confident showmanship, it becomes clear why James Brown and Judy Garland are ranked amongst Monáe's greatest musical influences. She comes armed with an assured, silky-smooth voice that can belt within an impressively controlled range, yet she's never afraid to throw caution to the wind and riff her way up and down a track with ease.

With all this talk of cyborgs, androids and electrodaggers, Monáe still manages to merge Space-Age surrealism with real world emotion without falling prey to cheesiness. The concept truly works here, and a complete story is told within the constraints of the album. Interweaving the sounds of classic 70s soul, today's electro and synth sounds and throwback classic pop rhythms, there's little that hasn't been covered within this seven track triumph.

Despite a great familiarity with the the musical styles explored in each song, I have honestly never heard anything like this album before. Janelle Monáe isn't just genre-bending, she's inventing. A surefire contender for album of the year, Metropolis: The Chase Suite is a shining powerhouse of cybertronic invention and lofty imagination. I don't know what to expect next from Monáe, but then again, I don't think anyone does. Well, except for Cindi Mayweather.