Vancouver Sun

Duff plunges back in with new album

- NICK PATCH

TORONTO — A tabloid fascinatio­n since before she could drive, Hilary Duff knew that releasing a breakup album months after her split from former NHLer Mike Comrie would have listeners connecting the autobiogra­phical dots.

But after an eight-year break between albums, the 27-year-old Duff felt ready to both dance and disclose.

“I would say the record is very personal,” she said of the recently released Breathe In Breathe Out.

“The whole point of making a record is to open up and give a little piece of yourself away. Sometimes that’s challengin­g to decide how much you want to share. But I’d say that most of the songs on the record, even if I didn’t write them myself, they touched me personally.”

True to its name, Duff’s new collection shoots to set dance floors gasping, with its upbeat pace standing in contrast to her reflection­s on a failing relationsh­ip.

Much of the record features lyrics about relationsh­ips either stuck, broken or over, while several other songs stand as empowermen­t anthems — including the Duff co-written Brave Heart.

“That was kind of a tough one to share,” she said of the song.

“Obviously it’s about my relationsh­ip and deciding to move on to something that’s unknown and scary, and being brave enough to do it.

“(It’s about) kind of tying a bow around the memories you made with someone and being grateful, and deciding to move forward.”

Its lessons could be tidily tied not only to Duff’s personal life, but her career.

With 2007’s Dignity, she wrapped a run of four albums in four and a half years (not including the needlessly thorough release of two different greatest hits collection­s).

All those studio albums went at least gold — with 2003’s Metamorpho­sis boasting particular­ly robust triple platinum sales — but Duff decided to step away from her music career temporaril­y while also slowing things considerab­ly on the acting front.

During her hiatus from the studio, Duff married Comrie, gave birth to her son Luca, co-wrote a trio of novels and limited her screen appearance­s mostly to cameos (including stints on Community, Raising Hope and Two and a Half Men).

She and Comrie made their divorce public earlier this year.

Just as she’s now restarted the engine on her music career, Duff has also found a hit onscreen with Younger, which airs on M3 in Canada and was recently renewed for a second season.

It’s validating, since returning to the industry after such a long layoff wasn’t necessaril­y easy.

“I think overall it’s taken a lot of courage to attempt to get back into the music industry and make a record and to still be relevant — and to put such a big piece of yourself out there to analyze,” she said.

She said once she wraps publicity duties for the record — which are “a lot more intense” these days with the proliferat­ion of media, she added — she’ll be heading to Canada, her “second home.”

Her records have always sold more proportion­ally here than in the U.S., something she chalks up to the determinat­ion with which she’s toured the country. (She also pointed out that Comrie’s family lives here, and “we love spending time with them.”)

As far as a larger-scale tour, Duff is intrigued but said, like seemingly everything else lately, “it would be different than how I did it before.”

“I love the idea,” she said. “I do have Luca and he’s in school. Every decision I make is based around him, and trying to create a sense of normalcy in his life.

“But I definitely want to tour again.”

 ?? DAVE SIDAWAY/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES ?? Hilary Duff says her new album Breathe In Breathe Out, released months after her divorce with former NHLer Mike Comrie, is ‘very personal … most of the songs on the record, even if I didn’t write them myself, they touched me personally.’
DAVE SIDAWAY/MONTREAL GAZETTE FILES Hilary Duff says her new album Breathe In Breathe Out, released months after her divorce with former NHLer Mike Comrie, is ‘very personal … most of the songs on the record, even if I didn’t write them myself, they touched me personally.’

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