Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 11/14/2007
Run Time: 43:37
Public image is vital to
pop stars, but few stars have been so inextricably tied to their image as
Britney Spears. Think back to
"...Baby One More Time" -- it has an indelible hook but what leaps to mind is not the sound of the single, but how
Britney looked in the video as she pouted and preened in a schoolgirls' uniform, an image as iconic as
Madonna's exposed navel. Every one of
Britney's hits had an accompanying image, as she relied on her carefully sculpted sexpot-next-door persona as much as she did on her records, but what happens when the image turns sour, as it certainly did for
Britney in the years following the release of
In the Zone? When that album hit the stores in 2003,
Britney had yet to marry, had yet to give birth, had yet to even meet professional layabout
Kevin Federline -- she had yet to trash her girl-next-door fantasy by turning into white trash. Some blamed
Federline for her rapid downward spiral, but she continued to descend after splitting with
K-Fed in the fall of 2006, as each month brought a new tabloid sensation from
Britney, a situation that became all the more alarming when contrasted to how tightly controlled her public image used to be. The shift in her persona came into sharp relief at the
2007 MTV Video Music Awards, as she sleepwalked through a disastrous lip-synch of her comeback single
"Gimme More," a disaster by any measure, but when it was compared to such previous meticulously staged
VMA appearances as her make-out with
Madonna in 2003, it made
Britney seem like a lost cause and fallen star.
All this toil and turmoil set the stage for her 2007 comeback
Blackout to be a flat-out train wreck, which it decidedly is not -- but that doesn't mean it's a triumph, either.
Blackout is an easy album to overpraise based on the lowered expectations
Britney's behavior has set for her audience, as none of her antics suggested that she'd be able to deliver something coherent and entertaining, two things that
Blackout is. As an album, it holds together better than any of her other records, echoing the sleek club-centric feel of
In the Zone but it's heavier on hedonism than its predecessor, stripped of any
ballads or sensitivity, and just reveling in dirty good times. So
Blackout acts as a soundtrack for
Britney's hazy, drunken days, reflecting the excess that's splashed all over the tabloids, but it has a coherence that the public
Britney lacks. This may initially seem like an odd dissociation but, in a way, it makes sense: how responsible is
Britney for her music, anyway? At the peak of her popularity, she never seemed to be dictating the direction of her music, so it only stands to reason that when her personal life has gotten too hectic, she's simply decided to let the professional producers create their tracks and then she'll just drop in the vocals at her convenience. Even the one song that plays like autobiography --
"Piece of Me," where she calls herself "Miss American dream since I was 17" and "I'm miss bad media karma/another day another drama," complaining "they stick all the pictures of my derriere in the magazines," as if she wasn't posing provocatively for
Rolling Stone as soon as
"Baby" broke big -- was outsourced to
"Toxic" producer/writers
Bloodshy & Avant, who try desperately to craft a defiant anthem for this tabloid fixture, as she couldn't be bothered to write one on her own.