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Nelly Furtado - Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng) (CD)

Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng)
$5.96 - $28.34
5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng)

Release Date:06/13/2006
Label:Umvd Import
UPC:602498539194

Track List: Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng)

  1. Afraid
  2. Maneater
  3. Promiscuous
  4. Glow
  5. Showtime
  6. No Hay Igual
  7. Te Busque
  1. Say It Right
  2. Do It
  3. In God's Hands
  4. Wait for You
  5. All Good Things (Come to an End)
  6. Let My Hair Down [*]
  7. Somebody to Love [*]

User Reviews: Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng)

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    Prince_thanh91

    By thanh  Jul 8, 2007

    Pros: So gud ♥

    Cons: I luv her :D

    This is a great album. I really like it.

Pro Reviews: Loose (Bonus Tracks) (Eng)

  • All Music Guide

    If Nelly Furtado's nearly impenetrable 2003 sophomore effort, Folklore, proved anything, it was that this modernday singer/songwriter is smart and ambitious yet doesn't quite have a handle on those very qualities. Dabbling in worldbeat and chronicling the perils of immediate success, she indulged herself without a care for the audience and the audience responded in kind, as the album barely cracked the Billboard Top 40, spawned no hits, and sold about a quarter of what her Grammywinning debut did. Clearly a rethink of some sort was in order for her next album, and 2006's Loose, delivered about three years later, certainly does present a different Nelly Furtado: one who is glammed up, sexed up, and ready for the dancefloor. Borrowing liberally from Gwen Stefani's ghetto fabulous makeover and a little bit from Justin Timberlake's sleek retro'80s moves on Justified, Furtado now has a sound that's straight 2006; with hooks that feel as comfortable as bumper music on MTV as they do as back...ground on cell phone commercials or as ringtones, she can blend into the hypersaturated media culture of 2006, a move that may alienate fans who were won over by how her debut, Whoa, Nelly, sounded like nothing else in 2000. No matter how clubfriendly Loose is even its quieter moments, like the closing "All Good Things (Come to an End)" (cowritten in part by Coldplay's Chris Martin), feel like ideal soundtracks to chillout moments ultimately Furtado did not get a swanstyled makeover, where her original personality has been chiseled and chipped away so only a vestige of her remains. Remember, Furtado is nothing if not smart, and she smartly picked Timbaland, one of the very best producers in modern music, as her main collaborator for Loose. Timbaland helmed all but two of the 12 main tracks here the album weighs in at 13 songs, but one is a Spanish version of the Juanes duet "Te Busque" and he gives much of this music a bracing feel, dense with oldschool synths, subtle sample collages, bonecrunching bass, cascading vocal hooks, and beats that sound so heavy it takes careful listening to realize how nimble they are. Nowhere is this more evident than on the killer opening triptych of "Afraid," "Maneater," and "Promiscuous," three songs that trumpet Furtado's makeover and make it seem pretty convincing, too particularly on "Maneater" with its circular, minorkey bass and "Promiscuous" with its chorus that sounds like vintage Prince. This is Timbaland at his best, and the only weak link is Furtado; no matter how she growls on "Maneater" or murmurs on "Promiscuous" no matter how much she sings about sex, period she just doesn't sound sexy. She sounds as if she's striving to be sexy, which doesn't generate much carnal heat, but it ultimately doesn't matter much since on all the heavy dance songs, of which there are a bunch, she's mixed into the background on Timbaland's production, functioning as another instrument, which helps the music work as just a stylish wall of sound. Furtado doesn't fight against Timbaland's mix, which proves her smarts more than anything on the showy Folklore; there's a reason why she chose Timbaland as a collaborator, and she lets him shine for the first half of the record, as they get the party rolling. Then on the second half of the record, the old Nelly starts to show through. She gets to play the world traveler with "No Hay Igual," where she deftly blends reggaeton and M.I.A., along with the smooth Latin pop ballad "Te Busque." Her words gradually come to the forefront, as on "Say It Right" a dark meditative piece that would have fit on her previous records if it didn't have a Timbaland production or on the sweetly ruminative "In God's Hands," and then on "Wait for You," which has Indianinfluenced hooks and a melody reminiscent of "I'm Like a Bird," both strands are pulled together in a haunting fashion. Read more Less

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Biography

Nelly Furtado

Singer/songwriter Nelly Furtado heavily credits her ethnic background and childhood for culturally and crucially spawning her creativity as a female and as an inspiring musician. Born and raised in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada, Furtado's working-class parents, whom are of Portuguese decent, instilled a hardcore work ethic during her upbringing. She spent eight sum... Read more