Published on Aug 19, 2001
“Miss Jackson if you’re nasty” announces the release of a
DANCE-oriented album and something like ten billion copies fly out
of the stores in the first week. Then word gets out that NO, it’s
NOT dance-oriented… sales slag immediately and Jackson goes on a
high-octane world tour, getting injured or sick in just about every
other city (it seems) trying to prove how dancey the album can
be.
Now
All For Youis very, very good stuff. If, say, Mandy Moore
came up with it she would move up from “divette” to… whatever
they call Toni Braxton. But Jackson is one of the
Top-5-Queen-of-the-World-and-the-Moon-Divas who, before her 1997
anti-Prozac release
The Velvet Rope, had Britney Spears’ current job: make ’em
DAI-YANCE.
The three dance songs are fantastic. There’s the
summer-dance-song masterpiece “Doesn’t Really Matter” (with a truly
funky Rockwilder remix dropped in the middle, brilliant) from the
movie soundtrack of
The Nutty Professor II. The title song that drove those ten
billion copies right out of stores is somewhere out in the front
followed by soon-to-be-club smash “Come On Get Up”, building up a
lot of anticipation for the (considerable) remainder of the
album.
Then pfffffft.
There’s a long chunk of what Jackson calls “baby-making
songs”… “When We OOOO”, “China Love”, “Love Scene (Ooh Baby)” and
“Would You Mind”… that sound practically indistinguishable from
one another except “China Love” with its tinkly oriental bells.
They’re NICE, and (not to give anything away) the interlude after
“Would You Mind” that finishes the whole thing is hilarious, but
the sequence is a let-down after the raucous opening. Besides, the
baby-making songs on
janet. are much better. Fans report having developed the
habit of skipping this part entirely when giving
All For You a spin.
There are two “rockers” that sound ready to be remixed into
dance songs should they ever be considered for singles release:
“You Ain’t Right” and “Trust ATry” plays with electronic textures
and does interesting things with Jackson’s voice. I think they’re
neat, but they don’t seem to be popular with her older fans. A
bizarre-cool song is “Son Of A Gun (I Betcha Think This Song is
About You)” that samples from Carly Simon’s 1970’s hit “You’re So
Vain”. Simon and Jackson practically duet as Jackson sings
vituperative phrases seemingly referring to her ex-husband Rene
Elizondo (knowledge of Jackson’s dramatic biography is essential to
understanding her music) and Simon drops cryptic lines about
“clouds in my coffee” and “nothing in the song refers to Mick
[Jagger].”
The album ends with a beautiful ballad titled “Better Days”
where it’s easy to imagine clouds lifting and light filtering
through. But you’ve got to wonder; is this it? She blew our minds
with
Control and the
Rhythm Nation 1814 singles but it’s been somewhat
plateau-ing from there. The Janet-Flyte Time combo is getting old.
What’s beyond being Diva on the Moon?
Cher?