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Christina Aguilera

Stripped (RCA)

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By Jason Bracelin

Published on December 12, 2002

Christina Aguilera's problem has always been overcompensation. On her debut, the young waif was so eager to show off her pipes she mostly sounded horribly overwrought and warbly, like Mariah Carey hopped up on diet pills. On her sultry new second album, Aguilera is just as eager, only now it's to distance herself from career-imperiling teen pop and revel in the joys of adulthood--namely, sex. Aguilera wields her sexuality with the subtlety of a Louisville Slugger, lining the CD jacket with nude photos of herself, informing suitors that "I want your body not your heart"--even enlisting bad girl Lil' Kim to spit some salacious rhymes.

But Stripped's scattershot feel contradicts Aguilera's pleas for intimacy. From Pinkesque rockers to Rockwilder-produced club bangers to Glen Ballard-penned power ballads, Stripped feels more like Aguilera's attempt at hitting a demographic--any demographic--than at revealing any larger truths about herself. Sure, the disc does have encouraging moments: "Walk Away" is an equally broken and beatific torch song, and "Make Over" is a symphonic, Sheryl Crow-like scorcher. Cuts such as these give promise to Stripped, but the disc's overlong, cover-all-bases nature ensures that, in the end, the main thing Aguilera reveals is her flesh.