Part of
Avril Lavigne's appeal -- a large part of it, actually -- is that she's a brat, acting younger than her 17 years on her 2002 debut,
Let Go, and never seeming like she much cared about the past (she notoriously mispronounced
David Bowie's name when reading Grammy nominations), or anything for that matter. She lived for the moment, she partied with sk8er bois, she didn't want anything complicated, and she sang in a flat, plain voice that illustrated her age as much as her silly, shallow lyrics. Those words got disproportionate attention because they were so silly and shallow, but most listeners just didn't care because, thanks to producer gurus
the Matrix, they were delivered in a shiny package filled with incessant, nagging hooks -- a sound so catchy it came to define the mainstream not long after
Let Go hit the radio.
The Matrix became ubiquitous on the strength of their work with
Lavigne, who herself became a big star, earning constant play on radio and MTV, kick starting a fashion trend of ties-n-tank tops for girls and inexplicably providing a touchstone for
indie rock queen
Liz Phair's mainstream makeover. Fame, however, didn't pull the two camps together; it pushed them their separate ways, as
the Matrix went on to record their own album and
Avril decided to turn serious, working with a variety of co-writers and producers, including fellow Canadian singer/songwriter
Chantal Kreviazuk, for her second album, 2004's
Under My Skin.
Lavigne hasn't only shed her trademark ties for thrift-shop skirts, she's essentially ditched the sound of
Let Go too, bringing herself closer to the mature aspirations of fellow young singer/songwriter
Michelle Branch. Since
Avril is still a teenager and still a brat, it's livelier than
Branch. Even when it sags under minor keys and mid-tempos, it's fueled on teen angst and a sense of entitled narcissism, as if she's the first to discover the joys of love and pain of heartache. In a sense, she comes across as
Alanis Morissette's kid sister, especially now that
the Matrix are gone and the hooks have been pushed to the background for much of the record; it's the teen spin on
Supposed Former Infatuation Junkie, where she's self-consciously trying to grow as an artist. Naturally, this means that
Under My Skin is less fun than
Let Go since there's nothing as giddy as
"Sk8er Boi," even if much of it is written from a similarly adolescent vantage.
Lavigne's collaborators,
Kreviazuk and
Evan Taubenfeld chief among them, have helped streamline her awkward writing, and her performances are also assured, which almost makes up for the thinness of her voice, which sounds far younger than the meticulous arrangements around it. So,
Under My Skin is a bit awkward, sometimes sounding tentative and unsure, sometimes clicking and surging on
Avril's attitude and ambition. But it's telling that the one song that really catches hold on the first listen and stands out on repeated spins is
"He Wasn't," the fastest, loudest, catchiest, and best song here, and the one closest to the spirit and sound of
Let Go -- it's not that
Lavigne hasn't matured, but it's that her talents are better suited on music that's a little less contemplative and deliberate than
Under My Skin. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine