True to
its title, Stripped, the audacious new RCA Records release from
Christina Aguilera, strips away the last remnants of her previous teen
idol persona and what's left is as real as it gets. The sixteen new
tracks that comprise Stripped, including her sensational debut single, "Dirrty,"
showcases an unadorned, unfettered and fearlessly outspoken artist who
has liberated herself, her soul and her music on an album that is as
much a declaration of independence as it is a convincing demonstration
of her fierce and original talent.
Simply put, this is the real deal. "When you're seventeen years old, green and inexperienced, you're
grateful for any guidance and direction you can get." Says Christina on
her rocket sled ride to the top following the 1999 release of her
eponymously-titled debut album, with its string of consecutive chart
toppers, including "Genie In A Bottle" and "What A Girl Wants." It was a
feat she would repeat the following year with Mi Reflejo, the smash
Spanish language version of her debut, followed by her hit holiday
release, My Kind Of Christmas.
Ten million plus albums, a Grammy win for
Best New Artist and a marathon round of world touring later, Christina
began to fearlessly break free from the mass media mask that hid her
true self, and the full scope of her talent. "I felt trapped," she
admits. "I was under the thumb of people who were mostly interested in
keeping me doing exactly the same thing. But I'm not blaming anyone,"
she's quick to add. "You learn fast in this business and, once I knew
where I wanted to go, I didn't let anyone get in my way."
Where she
wanted to go, at least initially, was to her Los Angeles home where she
could catch her breath, reconnecting with herself and her two canine
companions. "I needed a break," she reveals. "I wanted to disappear into
empty space for awhile. So much had happened in such a short time, and
not only in my career. I'd gone through a breakup with my first real
love and I began realizing that I should be experiencing a bit more of
life than TV and recording studios, hotels and green rooms."
As well
intended as her much-deserved hiatus may have been, the vocalist and
songwriter still had to contend with the restless creative energy that
had fueled her preteen trajectory from talent show contestant in and
around her native Pittsburgh to international superstardom."I'm driven,"
is Christina's frank admission. "Even in the midst of touring, I was
thinking about what my next album would be, writing bits and pieces of
songs in journals and scrapbooks."
That album, like Christina's long
overdue R&R, would have to wait. Unable to resist the lure of a
promising creative collaboration, she joined forces with Pink, Mya and
Lil' Kim on the smash "Lady Marmalade" single and video. That
eye-popping slice of ear candy kept her front and center in the
international spotlight even as she began, slowly and steadily, to lay
the groundwork for a musical manifesto that would change all the
rules."I was straight ahead about what I wanted to do," Christina
continues. "For a long time, I'd been uncomfortable with the image that
had been built around me and my music. It felt like I was pretending,
trying to hide the real me, and hurting inside because of it. This time
I was determined to step beyond the hype and glitter, to take it back
down to the bare necessities. It was like starting all over again." Yet
at the same time, Christina's bold work-in-progress wasn't simply a
reaction to the past. "I wanted to explore some of the music that had
inspired me coming up," she explains. "I've always been a huge fan of
soul. I love real rock & roll and hip-hop, of course, is one of my
biggest influences. I wanted it all."
And what she wanted she set about
to achieve with a relentless determination and a willingness to stretch
her creative boundaries. "I've always thought recording was about
attaining perfection," she reveals. "What I discovered making this album
is that getting across real feelings is what's important. As much as
possible, I wanted to have the listener right there in the studio with
me. I wanted to introduce myself, to get down to it. What mattered was
sharing what I was really going through? for the first time." And the
first and most formidable challenge for Christina was to assemble a
supporting cast that, in her words, "weren't influenced by my old
image."
A ruthless process of elimination yielded a production and
songwriting team that included, among others, Pink producer Linda Perry;
the team of Redman and Rockwilder; Alanis Morrissette producer Glenn
Ballard; fast rising studio wizard Scott Storch, as well artist/producer
Alicia Keys.Recorded over an eighteen-month stretch, with Christina
firmly at the helm every step of the way, Stripped slowly but surely
took shape, not only as an exercise in breathtaking stylistic diversity
but as a resonant and revealing look into the mind and emotions of a
young woman on the verge of personal and professional liberation.
The
result is resonant and revealing original tracks that decisively shred
Christina's squeaky clean persona, even as they set the stage for a
career that, millions of albums and concert tickets later, is only now
just getting started. The proof is all over Stripped, from the opening
notes of "Impossible," the smoky ballad by Alicia Keys, to the romantic
revelations of "Can't Hold Us Down," featuring the persuasive production
of Scott Storch; from the soaring affirmations of "Beautiful," to
blistering licks of "Make Over," to the superheated funk of "Dirrty,"
featuring Redman and Rockwilder. "I loved 'Let's Get Dirty,'" Christina
reveals, "So I asked Rockwilder to put something together kind of like
that for me." She laughs. "What I got was a little too close, but then I
figured, 'Why not?' The track is like an answer song to the original,
only from a female point of view." As much excitement and surprise as a
first listening to Stripped might generate, there are other textures,
urgent, honest and unguarded, that emerge with time. "Everything I sing
about in 'I'm OK' is real," she asserts. "I took it right out of my life
and I'm singing it right to my Dad." While another Stripped standout,
"Can't Hold Me Down," may at first sound like payback to a certain
superstar rapper, for Christina that's hardly the point. "I haven't got
time for all that," is her retort.
"I'm more interested in helping girls
stand up for themselves. That's what the song is about double standards
and how we're supposed to look and act a certain way just to please men.
If I have any influence as an entertainer, I want it to be optimistic
and uplifting, to make this world a little better place to live."
Looks as though we'll have to
wait for Christina to find herself, before she can role-model Alpha
Female characteristics for other young women!
back
to top
|