Out of all the
teen pop thrushes of the late '90s/early 2000s,
Jessica Simpson was perhaps the oddest. Not because she was genuinely strange -- especially compared to
Christina or
Pink -- but because she never seemed that comfortable with the genre. On her debut,
Sweet Kisses, that awkwardness could be written off as first-time jitters, particularly because the album boasted the dynamite single
"I Think I'm in Love," which is about as perfect as
pop gets. On her second album,
Irresistible, her awkwardness could be attributed to either the fabled sophomore slump or the fact that she was being tarted up too much, presented as a sexy tease when she's really just the sweet, curvy girl next door. Now, for her third album,
In This Skin, she tones down the trashy club beats and image, staying within the contemporary
dance-pop realm while inching toward the middle-of-the-road diva that she's always yearned to be. And that's the key to
Simpson and her records -- apart from that brief, brilliant moment on
"I Think I'm in Love," she's never seemed like she's wanted to sing
pop music. She's somebody who would have been much more comfortable in an era where she could have been produced by
Mitch Miller, not somebody who half-heartedly sings moderately stylish, overly calculated
dance-pop.
Simpson is not a bad singer, and only when she's given a show-stopping
ballad in the vein of
Celine Dion can she really strut her skills. The heart of
In This Skin is in the mature middle of the road, while its sound is still pitched young.
Simpson is still a sweet, photogenic girl with a good voice, and in her favor, as she gets further removed from her teens, she will be allowed to do more mature material -- and this CD is a tentative step in that direction. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine