The stories around Cat Power - her hard-partying ways, her depression, her fragility - have always been part of her appeal. She manages to mix her feminine allure with the other-wordliness of a reckless rock star, and fans love it.
But it's her voice that has kept everyone coming back for more, her potential to deliver soulful, stirring songs.
Her first album of originals in six years, Sun is the product of Power working entirely on her own. Unlike 2006's The Greatest, which had a real southern Memphis flavour, Sun sees Power choosing synths, piano, beats, guitar and beautiful vocal layers as her main palette, creating a rather electronic soundscape.
It's more jubilant, less tortured than her previous releases, and it's strong - even if she's still a little heartbroken and still singing about death.
There are the catchy Ruin, with its oscillating piano patterns, the propulsive rhythms of Cherokee, and the grooving swagger of 3,6,9 which once again declare her as a strong pop writer. Always On My Own is heartfelt and haunting, and Silent Machine is a harder, bluesy number reminiscent of The Dead Weather.