14-11-2012, 14:52
online listen
not on my x-mas list
there were a couple I liked
a ballad and the duet with Blake Shelton
another duet with Cee-Lo that sucked
most too dance/techno for me
don't care at all for the clip, the first single
1.3 from me and not yet rated by the pros at allmusic
from the album - Your Body
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cfCgLgiFDM
released Nov 13th, 2012
![[Image: 220px-Lotusaguilera.jpeg]](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/1/1d/Lotusaguilera.jpeg/220px-Lotusaguilera.jpeg)
Bio - from allmusic
A leader in the parade of Mickey Mouse Club veterans who stormed pop at the turn of the millennium,
Christina Aguilera was the sexy, brassy diva of the bunch -- the Rolling Stones to Britney Spearsâ
Beatles, as it were. Initially, it was difficult to see Christina outside of the prism of Britney, whose
1999 success launched the new millennium's teen pop boom, but Christinaâs big hits of 1999 -- âGenie in a
Bottle,â âWhat a Girl Wants,â âCome on Overâ -- more than held their own with âBaby One More Time,â while
revealing a vocalist with considerably more power and range than her erstwhile rival. Soon, Aguilera
distanced herself from the rest of the teen pop pack beginning with her carnal sophomore set, Stripped, a
heavy R&B album from 2002 that found its greatest success with the ballad âBeautiful.â Christina may have
overemphasized her sexual side with singles like âDirrtty,â but by the time of 2006âs Back To Basics, it
was clear that Aguilera was the most musically ambitious, and reliable, pop diva of the boom.
Born on Staten Island on December 18, 1980, Aguilera spent her early childhood in Pittsburgh, PA. By age
six, she began performing regularly in local talent shows, working her way to an appearance on the
nationally televised competition Star Search. This was the true beginning of Aguileraâs professional
career, leading her to joining Disney Channelâs reboot of The Mickey Mouse Club in 1992. Christina joined
a cast that also featured future stars Britney Spears, Ryan Gosling, Justin Timberlake, JC Chasez, and
Keri Russell. The New Mickey Mouse Club lasted for two years and after its cancellation, Aguilera began
working behind the scenes of the pop machine, cutting a duet with Japanese pop singer Keizo Nakanishi
called âAll I Wanna Do,â then representing the U.S. three years later in the Golden Stag International
Festival. Her first big break arrived in 1998, when she recorded âReflectionâ for the soundtrack of
Disneyâs Mulan, a performance that lead to a contract with RCA Records.
RCA released Christina Aguilera late in the summer of 1999, several months after Britneyâs âBaby One More
Timeâ began the teen pop boom. Christinaâs debut reached the top of the U.S. charts on the momentum of the
number one single âGenie in a Bottle,â which was followed in short order by another chart-topper in âWhat
a Girl Wants,â which happened to be the first number one of 2000. Aguilera racked up recognition in a
number of ways, playing the Superbowl halftime show and winning the Grammy for Best New Artist, as âCome
On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)â gave her a third number one single. Aguilera kept new product flowing,
too, releasing the Spanish-language Mi Reflejo -- she didnât speak the language, so she learned lyrics
phonetically -- and My Kind of Christmas by the end of the year, while other labels attempted to cash in
on her success via an unauthorized collection of old demos called Just Be Free. Christina Aguilera drifted
down the charts in 2001 but she stayed in the spotlight via her participation of a remake of Labelleâs
âLady Marmaladeâ for the soundtrack of Baz Luhrmannâs Moulin Rouge.
When Aguilera resurfaced with new material in 2002, she began using the appellation Xtina, which was not
the only âXâ on her sophomore effort, Stripped. A carnal collection of risqué R&B largely produced by
Scott Storch, Stripped was a defiant break from her teenybopper past, and Aguilera promoted it by flashing
lots of skin on the covers of her album, Rolling Stone, and Maxim. Such striking sexuality earned mixed
reviews and the lead single âDirrtyâ failed to replicate her early success, but she straightened the ship
with âBeautiful,â a ballad that turned into an anthem of sorts and peaked at number two on the Top 100.
Aguilera took another left turn for her next album, 2006âs Back To Basics. The title suggested something
simple but the album was anything but, spilling out over two discs and running the gamut from brassy swing
to modern dance. Its lead single, âAinât No Other Man,â was another blockbuster and Grammy winner for
Christina, and the tour was her most ambitious to date. In 2008, Aguilera released her first hits
collection, Keeps Gettin' Better, which was available exclusively via Target in the U.S. After a four-year
break, Aguilera returned with her fourth album, Bionic, in the spring of 2010. Bionic proved to be
Aguilera's first flop, earning decidedly mixed reviews, generating no hits, and failing to go gold. It was
followed by a second stumble in Burlesque, Aguilera's first starring role on the big screen which was
greeted to mediocre reviews and lackluster box office.
These were sudden unexpected setbacks, but Aguilera's comeback came just as quickly, arriving in the form
of NBC's televised singing competition The Voice. As one of the four celebrity judges -- the others being
Maroon 5's Adam Levine, Cee Lo Green, and Blake Shelton -- Christina found herself on a hit show that
elevated her profile and gave her another hit single as Levine's duet partner on Maroon 5's 2011 chart-
topper "Moves Like Jagger." The Voice retained its popularity in its second season in early 2012, and
Aguilera spent much of the year prepping her fifth album, Lotus, which was released in November 2012.
Album Review - from ny daily news
By all rights, Christina Aguileraâs new album should find her opening a vein. Itâs her first disc since
she experienced a divorce, released a flat-out bomb CD (âBionicâ), and appeared in a full-on stinker of a
flick (âBurlesqueâ).
True, the singer has rebounded of late, with a day job handing out judgments on the cheesy hit TV show
âThe Voice.â But that still leaves a huge backlog of pain crying out to be processed in her work.
Itâs entirely possible that Aguilera thinks thatâs just what sheâs done on her new CD, âLotus.â Certainly,
its songs donât want for references to emotional agony, starting with an introductory track that doubles
as a mission statement. âRise up/this is the beginning,â she sings at, well, the beginning. âLeave the
past behind.â
With that, sheâs off, spewing a torrent of defensive declarations that deny any legacy from her breakup
and career disappointments. In âArmy of Meâ Aguilera finds her âsecond skin.â In âRed Hot Kinda Loveâ she
hits the clubs in horny revenge. In âSing for Me,â she snarls that nothing can take away the glory and
power she derives from her voice.
That last issue may be part of the problem. Even when Aguilera means to shed real blood, the sheer force
of her vocals cauterizes the wounds before any red can flow. Sheâs a bully of a singer, pummeling the
notes into the ground as she rails in triumph.
Of course, thereâs a certain charge to be had from such raw power. And Aguilera deserves credit for
indulging far fewer showy melismas this time. She may continue to oversing, but at least sheâs doing so
with more focus.
Also improved is the material. âLotusâ contains some of the catchiest, danciest and funniest songs of the
singerâs career. âRed Hot Kinda Loveâ contains a canât-miss gimmick of a chorus. âLet There Be Loveâ
functions as a prime disco diva anthem, while âYour Bodyâ gains points for the specificity of its one-
night-stand verse (âIâm a freak/if you donât know where to go/Iâll finish off on my ownâ).
Only two of the discâs 13 tracks attempt a genuine expression of vulnerability. Just one, âBlank Page,â
finds her looking inside and taking some blame. Itâs a pretty song, if one that blatantly rides Adeleâs
coattails. Not only does âPageâ employ the same piano/voice arrangement as that starâs âSomeone Like You,â
Aguilera apes the precise length of Adeleâs notes.
Itâs hardly the only song here to nick another womanâs style. In âCease Fireâ and âAround the Worldâ
Aguilera affects an improbable island accent, Ã la Rihanna, while âJust a Fool,â sounds like something
Linda Perry would have written for Pink.
In that last number, Aguilera duets with fellow âVoiceâ judge Blake Shelton â in a way thatâs telling. He
sings with measured resolve while she nearly suffocates him. Itâs certainly a powerful approach, but it
comes at the cost of communicating genuine soul.
Track Listing
1. Lotus Intro
2. Army Of Me
3. Red Hot Kinda Love
4. Make the World Move Feat. CeeLo Green
5. Your Body
6. Let There Be Love
7. Sing For Me
8. Blank Page
9. Cease Fire
10. Around The World
11. Circles
12. Best Of Me
13. Just A Fool Feat. Blake Shelton
not on my x-mas list
there were a couple I liked
a ballad and the duet with Blake Shelton
another duet with Cee-Lo that sucked
most too dance/techno for me
don't care at all for the clip, the first single
1.3 from me and not yet rated by the pros at allmusic
from the album - Your Body
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6cfCgLgiFDM
released Nov 13th, 2012
Bio - from allmusic
A leader in the parade of Mickey Mouse Club veterans who stormed pop at the turn of the millennium,
Christina Aguilera was the sexy, brassy diva of the bunch -- the Rolling Stones to Britney Spearsâ
Beatles, as it were. Initially, it was difficult to see Christina outside of the prism of Britney, whose
1999 success launched the new millennium's teen pop boom, but Christinaâs big hits of 1999 -- âGenie in a
Bottle,â âWhat a Girl Wants,â âCome on Overâ -- more than held their own with âBaby One More Time,â while
revealing a vocalist with considerably more power and range than her erstwhile rival. Soon, Aguilera
distanced herself from the rest of the teen pop pack beginning with her carnal sophomore set, Stripped, a
heavy R&B album from 2002 that found its greatest success with the ballad âBeautiful.â Christina may have
overemphasized her sexual side with singles like âDirrtty,â but by the time of 2006âs Back To Basics, it
was clear that Aguilera was the most musically ambitious, and reliable, pop diva of the boom.
Born on Staten Island on December 18, 1980, Aguilera spent her early childhood in Pittsburgh, PA. By age
six, she began performing regularly in local talent shows, working her way to an appearance on the
nationally televised competition Star Search. This was the true beginning of Aguileraâs professional
career, leading her to joining Disney Channelâs reboot of The Mickey Mouse Club in 1992. Christina joined
a cast that also featured future stars Britney Spears, Ryan Gosling, Justin Timberlake, JC Chasez, and
Keri Russell. The New Mickey Mouse Club lasted for two years and after its cancellation, Aguilera began
working behind the scenes of the pop machine, cutting a duet with Japanese pop singer Keizo Nakanishi
called âAll I Wanna Do,â then representing the U.S. three years later in the Golden Stag International
Festival. Her first big break arrived in 1998, when she recorded âReflectionâ for the soundtrack of
Disneyâs Mulan, a performance that lead to a contract with RCA Records.
RCA released Christina Aguilera late in the summer of 1999, several months after Britneyâs âBaby One More
Timeâ began the teen pop boom. Christinaâs debut reached the top of the U.S. charts on the momentum of the
number one single âGenie in a Bottle,â which was followed in short order by another chart-topper in âWhat
a Girl Wants,â which happened to be the first number one of 2000. Aguilera racked up recognition in a
number of ways, playing the Superbowl halftime show and winning the Grammy for Best New Artist, as âCome
On Over Baby (All I Want Is You)â gave her a third number one single. Aguilera kept new product flowing,
too, releasing the Spanish-language Mi Reflejo -- she didnât speak the language, so she learned lyrics
phonetically -- and My Kind of Christmas by the end of the year, while other labels attempted to cash in
on her success via an unauthorized collection of old demos called Just Be Free. Christina Aguilera drifted
down the charts in 2001 but she stayed in the spotlight via her participation of a remake of Labelleâs
âLady Marmaladeâ for the soundtrack of Baz Luhrmannâs Moulin Rouge.
When Aguilera resurfaced with new material in 2002, she began using the appellation Xtina, which was not
the only âXâ on her sophomore effort, Stripped. A carnal collection of risqué R&B largely produced by
Scott Storch, Stripped was a defiant break from her teenybopper past, and Aguilera promoted it by flashing
lots of skin on the covers of her album, Rolling Stone, and Maxim. Such striking sexuality earned mixed
reviews and the lead single âDirrtyâ failed to replicate her early success, but she straightened the ship
with âBeautiful,â a ballad that turned into an anthem of sorts and peaked at number two on the Top 100.
Aguilera took another left turn for her next album, 2006âs Back To Basics. The title suggested something
simple but the album was anything but, spilling out over two discs and running the gamut from brassy swing
to modern dance. Its lead single, âAinât No Other Man,â was another blockbuster and Grammy winner for
Christina, and the tour was her most ambitious to date. In 2008, Aguilera released her first hits
collection, Keeps Gettin' Better, which was available exclusively via Target in the U.S. After a four-year
break, Aguilera returned with her fourth album, Bionic, in the spring of 2010. Bionic proved to be
Aguilera's first flop, earning decidedly mixed reviews, generating no hits, and failing to go gold. It was
followed by a second stumble in Burlesque, Aguilera's first starring role on the big screen which was
greeted to mediocre reviews and lackluster box office.
These were sudden unexpected setbacks, but Aguilera's comeback came just as quickly, arriving in the form
of NBC's televised singing competition The Voice. As one of the four celebrity judges -- the others being
Maroon 5's Adam Levine, Cee Lo Green, and Blake Shelton -- Christina found herself on a hit show that
elevated her profile and gave her another hit single as Levine's duet partner on Maroon 5's 2011 chart-
topper "Moves Like Jagger." The Voice retained its popularity in its second season in early 2012, and
Aguilera spent much of the year prepping her fifth album, Lotus, which was released in November 2012.
Album Review - from ny daily news
By all rights, Christina Aguileraâs new album should find her opening a vein. Itâs her first disc since
she experienced a divorce, released a flat-out bomb CD (âBionicâ), and appeared in a full-on stinker of a
flick (âBurlesqueâ).
True, the singer has rebounded of late, with a day job handing out judgments on the cheesy hit TV show
âThe Voice.â But that still leaves a huge backlog of pain crying out to be processed in her work.
Itâs entirely possible that Aguilera thinks thatâs just what sheâs done on her new CD, âLotus.â Certainly,
its songs donât want for references to emotional agony, starting with an introductory track that doubles
as a mission statement. âRise up/this is the beginning,â she sings at, well, the beginning. âLeave the
past behind.â
With that, sheâs off, spewing a torrent of defensive declarations that deny any legacy from her breakup
and career disappointments. In âArmy of Meâ Aguilera finds her âsecond skin.â In âRed Hot Kinda Loveâ she
hits the clubs in horny revenge. In âSing for Me,â she snarls that nothing can take away the glory and
power she derives from her voice.
That last issue may be part of the problem. Even when Aguilera means to shed real blood, the sheer force
of her vocals cauterizes the wounds before any red can flow. Sheâs a bully of a singer, pummeling the
notes into the ground as she rails in triumph.
Of course, thereâs a certain charge to be had from such raw power. And Aguilera deserves credit for
indulging far fewer showy melismas this time. She may continue to oversing, but at least sheâs doing so
with more focus.
Also improved is the material. âLotusâ contains some of the catchiest, danciest and funniest songs of the
singerâs career. âRed Hot Kinda Loveâ contains a canât-miss gimmick of a chorus. âLet There Be Loveâ
functions as a prime disco diva anthem, while âYour Bodyâ gains points for the specificity of its one-
night-stand verse (âIâm a freak/if you donât know where to go/Iâll finish off on my ownâ).
Only two of the discâs 13 tracks attempt a genuine expression of vulnerability. Just one, âBlank Page,â
finds her looking inside and taking some blame. Itâs a pretty song, if one that blatantly rides Adeleâs
coattails. Not only does âPageâ employ the same piano/voice arrangement as that starâs âSomeone Like You,â
Aguilera apes the precise length of Adeleâs notes.
Itâs hardly the only song here to nick another womanâs style. In âCease Fireâ and âAround the Worldâ
Aguilera affects an improbable island accent, Ã la Rihanna, while âJust a Fool,â sounds like something
Linda Perry would have written for Pink.
In that last number, Aguilera duets with fellow âVoiceâ judge Blake Shelton â in a way thatâs telling. He
sings with measured resolve while she nearly suffocates him. Itâs certainly a powerful approach, but it
comes at the cost of communicating genuine soul.
Track Listing
1. Lotus Intro
2. Army Of Me
3. Red Hot Kinda Love
4. Make the World Move Feat. CeeLo Green
5. Your Body
6. Let There Be Love
7. Sing For Me
8. Blank Page
9. Cease Fire
10. Around The World
11. Circles
12. Best Of Me
13. Just A Fool Feat. Blake Shelton


