yourmusic.com
Already a subscriber? Log In
Search
For Browse Learn More
Subscribe Now
Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Rihanna
Good Girl Gone Bad
Rihanna:  Good Girl Gone Bad Tell a Friend about this album

$6.99
AMG Top Pick Listen

Album Review

Released: 2007
Label: Def Jam
Selection #: 171696
Award-winning Barbadian artist drops danceable disc. Umbrella (w/Jay-Z), Don’t Stop The Music, Shut Up And Drive, Hate That I Love You (w/Ne-Yo), etc.
Listen RM WM
1 Umbrella
2 Push Up on Me
3 Don't Stop the Music
4 Breakin' Dishes
5 Shut Up and Drive
6 Hate That I Love You
7 Say It
8 Sell Me Candy
9 Lemme Get That
10 Rehab
11 Question Existing
12 Good Girl Gone Bad
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

When you've released a pair of albums containing a few monster singles and a considerable amount of unsteady, unassured material, why mess around the third time out? From beginning to end, "Good Girl Gone Bad" is as pop as pop gets in 2007, each one of its 12 songs a potential hit in some territory. Unlike "Music of the Sun" or "A Girl Like Me", neither Caribbean flavorings nor ballad ODs are part of the script, and there isn't an attempt to make something as theatrical as "Unfaithful." There is, however, another '80s hit involved: just as "Sos" appropriated Soft Cell's version of "Tainted Love," "Shut Up And Drive" turns New Order's "Blue Monday" into a sleek, forthcoming proposition, one that is as undeniable and rocking as Sugababes' 2002 U.K. smash "Freak Like Me" (a cover of Adina Howard's 1995 hit that swiped from another '80s single, Gary Numan's "Are Friends Electric?"). "Shut Up And Drive" is part of an all-upbeat opening sequence that carries through five songs. Rihanna knows exactly what she wants and is in total control at all times, even when she's throwing things and proclaiming "I'm a fight a man" amid marching percussion and synthesizers set on "scare" during "Breakin' Dishes." The album's lead song and lead single, "Umbrella," is her best to date, delivering mammoth if spacious drums, a towering backdrop during the chorus, and vocals that are somehow totally convincing without sounding all that impassioned -- an ideal spot between trying too hard and boredom, like she might've been on her 20th take, which only adds to the song's charm. The album's second half is relatively varied and a little heavier on acoustic guitar use, but it's not lacking additional standouts. Three consecutive Timbaland productions, including one suited for a black college marching band and another that effectively pulls the romantically co-dependent heartstrings, enhance the album rather than make it more scattered. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide

Back To Top
Shipping Is Always Free
About This Artist
Biography


Related Artists
Nivea
Ashanti
Amerie
Kelis
Beyoncé
Christina Milian
Nina Sky
Adassa
Ciara
Teairra Marí
Letoya



Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC