Los Angeles Times

Listen closely as an artist is reborn

Christina Aguilera revels in ‘Liberation’ after up-and-down years on ‘The Voice.’

- By Gerrick D. Kennedy

In the 20 years since Christina Aguilera’s arrival helped usher in a new era of pop, the performer has shown she’s unafraid of transforma­tion.

Aguilera famously torched the bubblegum teen-pop image crafted for her with a pair of leather chaps and edgier genreblend­ing music that announced a young woman in full control of her agency. It shocked America and the then-21-year-old singer was slut-shamed by critics, peers and even Tina Fey.

At one point she took her cues from the styles of the 1920s-’40s, committing wholly to a vintage pinup aesthetic to match the modern take on vintage jazz, soul and blues she was exploring.

She’s assumed the role of a cyborg, channeled Marilyn Monroe and Marilyn Manson — for the same project — and reemerged as a blissedout earth mother.

Shapeshift­ing has always been a part of Aguilera’s charm, but her real appeal lies in that voice.

With a fiery range that recalled early Whitney Houston, Aguilera was able to separate herself from the pack of pop ingénues reaching superstar status during

the early aughts.

For a generation who hit puberty during the great Y2K pop explosion, Aguilera was an essential voice with music that tackled self-empowermen­t, feminism, sex and domestic violence — subject matter her contempora­ries were shying from.

Just look at the lasting impact of 2002’s “Stripped,” her most ambitious work to date and an album that has since become a blueprint for the likes of Miley Cyrus, Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato — young singers, all of whom have come of age in front of the public and sought to shed their manufactur­ed images the way Aguilera once did.

Aguilera has sold over 50 million records worldwide, notched dozens of Billboard Hot 100 hits, won six Grammys, dipped into film and helped make NBC’s “The Voice” a TV phenomenon.

Yet the last decade has been shaky for Aguilera on the music front.

Her most recent work — 2010’s underrated “Bionic” and its mostly forgotten follow-up, “Lotus” — wasn’t met with the same fanfare she was used to, and a lengthy stint on “The Voice” left Aguilera’s fans wondering if she would ever return to music.

Now 37, Aguilera is undertakin­g her latest reinventio­n, one that was fueled by the singer-songwriter feeling “disconnect­ed” from her purpose.

“I had to get back to my own artist body and self,” she says.

Finding her way back to herself and her passion is the core of “Liberation,” her first album in six years.

Debuting at No. 6 on the Billboard 200 upon its release last month, “Liberation” showcases a creatively renewed Aguilera, but don’t call it a comeback: “I feel like a brand-new artist,” she says.

Leaning mostly toward R&B and hip-hop, genres that have always informed her style, Aguilera’s new album isn’t about being progressiv­e or chasing a trend — she’s not interested in any of that, she says — but instead it’s about showcasing an artist reborn after losing her footing.

The collection is some of her more forward-thinking work in years. When she’s not doing a mix of “The Sound of Music” with Michael Jackson, she’s crafting downtempo R&B with D.C. rapper GoldLink, smashing the patriarchy and navigating collaborat­ions with Ty Dolla Sign, Kanye West, Anderson .Paak and MNEK.

And, yes, she’s embraced a new look — this time, however, she’s found inspiratio­n in her own skin, which is why these days her aesthetic is more stripped back (her album cover is just her bare face).

While tending to her 3year-old daughter, Summer Rain, Aguilera discussed the four-year journey to “Liberation,” her first tour in a decade and why she gave up “The Voice.”

For a while there it felt like an album was never going to materializ­e.

I do take my time with records, but Jesus, yeah, this one was a while in waiting — for many different factors and reasons. I love collaborat­ing so much and taking the time to get to know the people that you’re working with and truly do something meaningful and not just commercial­ized and cliché. I’m not the artist that‘s going to just get a bunch of songs from my label, record it and put it in a little bow and send it off.

What kept you away from music for so long?

I felt disconnect­ed for a while and I wasn’t in the right head space either, being in an environmen­t that was just not good for me.

That environmen­t you’re referring to is “The Voice.” You said you felt suffocated as a judge. When did it stop being fun for you?

Nobody expected [“The Voice”] to be as big as “Idol” or take off the way it did. It just became a whole different kind of a machine. You’d have two teams at once because they were overlappin­g seasons. It just wasn’t exactly what I wanted to be doing with my life. I’m not a spokespers­on. I’m an artist.

The blind audition thing was very intriguing to me because it provided an opportunit­y for anybody to get on stage and be discovered, regardless of their look. Being in this business for so long and knowing how labels work and how packaging is so very important, that idea of not being able to see them was genius to me. But year by year, I kept seeing things that were not lining up with that original vision. The show progressed in a direction I wasn’t into and that I didn’t think was a lot of times fair.

Do you think there’s still any value to singing competitio­n shows?

Look, everybody has their own experience, and I don’t want to devalue anyone’s own experience with any of those shows. As an artist, I believe in artists being able to express themselves how they feel they should. Just know there’s a lot of other people involved in those shows. Certain factors and things are dictated according to what ratings will be. It’s definitely a business. I also saw blatant things that I didn’t think were OK and that I’m sure no one would want to put up with in a work environmen­t. It was important for me to step away.

Your last projects weren’t critical or commercial successes. Did that add any pressure while working on “Liberation”?

Because I am a real vocalist, I have always heard, “Why don’t you just stand and do a bunch of ballads?” That’s just one element of what I do, but it’s not everything. I would be so bored if I sat on the stage and just sang ballad after ballad. I’m an artist. The label was great in giving me the freedom to take my time and do what I wanted. I’m no stranger to knowing how to play the game.

It is an amazing thing whenever things are commercial­ly received and successful. I’ve had those successes with “Genie in a Bottle” and “What a Girl Wants,” and I was still miserable because I wasn’t connected to the music and wasn’t being able to change it. I’ve done my share of that and I see a lot of artists get into that trap of chasing the charts. After I’m dead and gone, I really want the music paid attention to and not because of where I charted or how commercial­ly successful it was but because the quality has stood the test of time.

Although the album is heavily R&B and hip-hop, it was still surprising to hear that Kanye West and Anderson .Paak were key to informing its direction. How did that happen?

I sat with Kanye a few years ago, while I was still on “The Voice,” actually. We met at Rick Rubin’s studio, where he was recording at the time — he was finishing “The Life of Pablo” record — and we just connected. I loved the tracks he was playing me. That’s where I heard “Maria” and [the album’s lead single] “Accelerate” for the first time. They had so much heart and depth. His music makes you feel something impactful, one way or another. He’s a controvers­ial artist, and I’ve been that way myself. Working with him felt really good. I had done some recording before the Kanye meeting, but doing “Maria” with him gave me the base for the album. The whole story unfolded before me when I listened to the song.

And then Anderson really helped the album take shape. I met him last year, and things rapidly unfolded. He is just such a great musician. He’s such a great lyricist with such a strong cadence. I explored different ways to use my voice on this record, and it wasn’t all about hitting high notes and being acrobatic and full of ad-libs. I wanted to scale back again and just really vibe.

There’s always been a thread of empowermen­t in your music. How much of what was going on in the world influenced the music you were working on?

The climate right now is interestin­g because there are so many people that are feeling oppressed or suppressed. I’ve always been about putting out messages that I feel strongly about and about my truth. It’s why I did songs like “Beautiful” and “Fighter” so long ago and why I have songs like “Fall in Line” and “Sick of Sittin’ ” on this album, records that are perfect for anyone that maybe need to find their own truth. We’re in a place where people need to feel liberated and I wanted to reflect that.

You’re going on your first tour in a decade. What can fans expect?

Ever since I had my son [Max Liron, 10], the idea of the tour has actually scared me. I was, like, “How does this work? How do people do this? Do I uproot my kids from their home life and everything?” With this more intimate tour, it’s kind of lessening the pressure. I’m dipping my toe back in the water and also giving my fans a real chance to see me after they haven’t in so long. I’m probably going to take my daughter with me because she’s so little. I don’t want to be separated. It’ll be interestin­g.

‘I’ve always been about putting out messages that I feel strongly about and about my truth.’ — CHRISTINA AGUILERA

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States