Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Bigger and Braver (Jennifer Lopez Album #6)

6.) Brave
(October 2007)


The Set-Up
It was time to get back into Pop action with this album, and Ms. Lopez certainly did her best to keep up to date with what was hot in music at the time. It wasn’t necessarily a bad album, but it wasn’t her greatest, which is why it ended up on my countdown at #6.

The Play-by-Play
The album begins with a terrific opener “Stay Together”, obviously putting all those people on blast who didn’t think her marriage to Marc Anthony would be lasting this long. Things groove right along into “Forever”, a very hypnotic trip and one of the more lively numbers. “Hold It Don’t Drop It” comes right out of the gate, sampling Tavares’ “It Only Takes A Minute”. It is one of the highlights of the album, throwing back to a sort of updated disco. “Do It Well” follows as the first single. It’s not one of the most imaginative singles that Jennifer Lopez has to offer, but it’s one of the most upbeat she’s released, and it has excellent production from superstar man Ryan Tedder. And who would’ve thought that sampling Michael Jackson actually would sound legit? “Gotta Be There” does a tremendous job with its fast lyrics and personal plea to follow her man around everywhere (basically it serves as the stalker anthem). Then things get a little gentler with “Never Gonna Give Up”. It sounds a lot like she’s trying to rip off The Beatles in the beginning, but sure enough it turns into the most beautiful and heartfelt moments on the album. Although her voice has never been the strongest to begin with, her voice is pitch perfect and very vulnerable, clearly exclaiming that through all of her mishaps in love, she is still going to try and try again and find it (which at this point with Mr. Anthony, she has). From here on out, it’s filled with average (or even below average) quality songs that don’t add any great interest to the rest of the album. “Mile In These Shoes” sounds a bit too young for J.Lo to be singing about. “The Way It Is” is a bit too repetitive for my taste. “Be Mine” is unimaginative and certainly not very exciting. “I Need Love” sounds like the CD skipped and went back to “The Way It Is” for a minute. Then along comes the closing songs, first with “Wrong When You’re Gone” which again tries to be current, keeping up with artists like Keri Hilson, Ciara, etc. It’s a decent attempt, but definitely not in her range for what she’s done previously. “Brave” just serves the purpose as closing out on a positive, uplifting, but overly corny note. And then we’re given one last treat, a little revamping of “Do It Well”, but adding in a spectacular verse from Ludacris.

The Point
Overall, Brave serves as one of Jennifer Lopez’s strongest albums, but it doesn’t stand out as one of the most memorable. It sounds more like middle-aged R&B trying to aim for a younger audience, but it’s so stuck on throwbacks to music that people at this time didn’t care to listen to that much. All props to Jennifer for keeping with what she does best, and that’s delivering good pop music. But nothing stood out, it was just the exact same formula. Nothing was really updated or current, it seemed to be going in a different direction.

The Essentials
“Hold It Don’t Drop It” is the big standout for me as the most fun. I wish it could’ve had more success as a single.
“Do It Well” stands out for the great sampling of “Keep On Truckin’” and it’s low notes and fast lyrics.
But the big moment I love the most is the beauty in Jennifer’s voice on “Never Gonna Give Up”.

No comments:

Post a Comment