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Lohan gets introspective on follow-up CD
From Nekesa Moody
NEW
YORK—When teen actress Lindsay Lohan decided to become known as teen
singer Lindsay Lohan, she followed a tried-and-true formula for the
under 21-pop set: an album dominated by upbeat, danceable songs that
catered to a youthful demographic. Her sophomore record, “A Little More
Personal (Raw),” still has a few of those bouncy, light tunes that will
appeal to the tween set. But the overall tone is darker: Power ballads
with thrashing guitars have replaced the dance tracks, and the album,
released Tuesday, finds her reflecting on personal troubles of the past
year, including the incarceration of her father.
It’s not the kind of material that helped her sell more than a million
copies of her first album, “Speak.” But at 19, Lohan is eager to show a
more adult side — and she hopes the public is ready to see it, too. “I
do still have the younger fan base and I want them to be able to relate
to some lighter songs, but I want to grow with my fans, and I’ve been
trying to do that for so long,” says Lohan. “I’ve just grown up really
fast, and I’m thankful for that.”
She’s not thankful, however, for some of the things that have caused her
to grow up at warp speed, especially over the past few months. Chief
among them were the troubles of her father, Michael Lohan. Estranged
from Lindsay, her mother, Dina, and Lindsay’s three younger siblings,
Michael Lohan was frequently in trouble with the law over the past year,
including an arrest for driving while impaired. He was sentenced in May
to up to four years in prison, and the Lohans divorced. “When I think
about it, it kind of just registers to me that it was in the papers that
my father’s going to jail. I think about that and I’m like, wow, that’s
really hard,” says Lohan. “People usually don’t deal with that in the
public eye, for whoever it may be to see.”
Lohan generally stayed mum about her father in the press, but their
relationship is one of the focal points of the new record. The first
single, “Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father),” is about a
daughter’s abandonment by her dad, and the video, which she directed,
depicts an abusive husband. “It was really to let girls, boys, anyone
that’s in an abusive relationship, anyone who is going through things
like that ... to put it out there that it’s OK to express how you feel,”
says Lohan. “If I’m in the position where I can take a stand and say
something important, then I’d like to do that.”
Kara DioGuardi, the album’s executive producer and a co-writer along
with Lohan on some of the album’s songs, says the album reflects the
more mature choices Lohan has taken in her life and in her work. Her
upcoming films, including two about the assassinations of Robert Kennedy
and John Lennon, are of a more serious vein. She’s also done a film with
Meryl Streep. “There were songs on the album that were deeper, with more
in-depth focus to her life,” says DioGuardi. “I think the need to define
herself as a young woman as opposed to a young child is becoming more
and more evident.”
That’s especially so given Lohan’s increasing tabloidization. She has
become a fixture in gossip magazines since transforming from the cute
kid in “The Parent Trap” to the beautiful, sexy starlet in last year’s
box- office hit “Mean Girls.” But not all the coverage has been
favourable. Her sudden, voluptuous form last year gave way to plastic
surgery rumours (which she has dismissed), and her dramatic weight loss
fuelled talk of an eating disorder or drug use (which Lohan vehemently
denies).
In addition, her penchant for late-night partying is constantly
documented, as well as her love life (reports have linked her to actor
Jared Leto after her split last year from “That ‘70s Show” star Wilmer
Valderrama) and even her hair colour (for the record, the redhead has
now gone from blond to auburn). Lohan finds the spotlight alternately
embarrassing, frustrating and upsetting: “That’s just gross,” says Lohan.
“These things about people going out and doing drugs — people have
families and kids who look up to them — a sister and brother — how can
you say that? It’s really horrible in a way.” |