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Britney Spears set for ‘Blackout’ hit
Michelle Nichols
NEW
YORK—After making headlines for everything but music, Britney Spears is
back with an album industry insiders say should top the charts despite
her.
Over the past year the one-time Mouseketeer shaved her head, spent time
in rehab, went through an ugly divorce, lost custody of her children and
attacked a photographer’s car.
And in an odd habit yielding endless tabloid references to the title of
her biggest album — “Oops!... I Did It Again” — she kept getting
photographed without her underwear.
Now Spears is hoping that the release of “Blackout,” her first studio
album in four years on October 30, will revive her reputation. The album
has already produced “Gimme More,” which topped U.S. digital charts and
critics expect a hit.
But some critics who have heard her latest opus say the album’s likely
success has little to with her abilities and more to do with the
producers.
The New York Daily News noted all the “studio trickery” made her sound
like a “Brit-Bot” machine.
“If a blow-up sex doll could sing, this is what she’d sound like,” wrote
Jim Farber. “In terms of studio trickery, Paris Hilton’s album was
practically ‘unplugged’ compared to this.”
“How wonderful it is that, in the world of slick pop, even if stars
can’t deliver, the machine behind them still can,” he said, adding that
her personal woes don’t mean “Britney Spears can’t turn up on some
slammin’ new songs.”
The Times of London said that Spears should “take a certain amount of
pleasure in the fact that ‘Blackout’ coheres far better than sprawling
recent sets by fellow Mickey Mouse Club alumni Justin Timberlake and
Christina Aguilera.”
But reviewer Pete Paphides added “certain songs wouldn’t have sounded
too different if her vocal were totally erased.”
EMBRACING LIFE!
A Jive Records press release reveals the album’s title refers to
“blocking out negativity and embracing life fully.”
And the lyrics make clear references to her life. In one song, she sings
“I’m Miss bad media karma/Another day another drama/Guess I can’t see no
harm in working and being a mama.”
Spears is due to appear at a Los Angeles court hearing on Friday over
the custody of her kids. She and ex-husband Kevin Federline have been
locked in a bitter custody battle over their kids as Spears’ life has
seemed to veer out of control despite a stint in drug and alcohol rehab.
Geoff Mayfield, director of charts at Billboard, said Spears’ album
could debut at No. 1 with sales of between 200,000 and 300,000, well
down on the more than 600,000 copies sold of previous album “In the
Zone” during its first week. The 2003 album contained the Grammy-winning
song “Toxic.”
Spears’ first-week sales peaked at more than one million for her second
album, 2000’s “Oops!... I Did It Again,” he said.
“Most artists are selling less than they did before just because the
album market is down,” he said. “She’s not immune to that and she’s
already seen an erosion of her sales from what she did when she was a
teen pop star.”
“Even without the adverse publicity that she’s had to weather I would
have expected her to have a smaller number.”
According to Nielsen SoundScan data, year-to-date U.S. album sales are
down 14.2 percent in 2007 compared to 2006 as the industry grapples with
the rise of digital music.
Michael Musto, entertainment columnist for New York’s Village Voice,
said that while he is yet to hear “Blackout” he has high hopes for it
“because it is what she does best,” although he did acknowledge that her
“voice is one of many elements that are put together in a record by
other people.” |