audio review : Enjoy ( song ) … Janet Jackson

“Just enjoy the simple things, enjoy the day life brings,” Janet Jackson says, “Enjoy the gift of life.” That’s great advice, it seems, but she shouldn’t tell people to enjoy things because it’s not really up to them. It’s an automatic response. They either enjoy it or they don’t. Not that logical psychology matters here. This is a simple summer song with its head stuck in the clouds. That’s “simple” in concept. The music is actually fairly complex.

The drums and bass should be set more prominently in the mix; I’d probably add a rougher effect on the bass and pan the snares with a stereo delay; but listen for the little experimental loop that plays along with them. It sounds like a sample of some kind, but probably not. This is a Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis production, after all, accommodated by sweet lead vocals and a thick syrupy layer of backgrounds on the chorus. Enjoyable? Yes.

my rating : 4 of 5

2006

audio review : 20 YO ( album ) ... Janet Jackson

audio review : Love 2 Love ( song ) … Janet Jackson

Prince is the only song artist who can get away with replacing title words with the numbers they sound like because he’s Prince. For everyone else it comes across as silly and pretentious. Janet Jackson is no exception. Still there’s something clever going on here. “We are a couple,” she says. That’s “2”, so I guess it makes sense.

The Love part, at least the latter Love part, is a generic euphemism for lust; the sexual kind that has a girl touching, licking, kissing and stroking a guy’s dick in order to get it ready to enter her pussy. It’s the fact that he’s also her romantic partner, not just her romantic partner for the night, that makes it all right in her mind.

What makes it all right in my mind is the music; a sultry and metallic, somewhat futuristic groove carefully produced by Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis. Those two deserve all the credit in the world for composing such a sexy soundtrack. It’s the way Janet Jackson harmonizes those “Ooooo”s though that’s most pleasing to the ears.

my rating : 4 of 5

2006

audio review : Love 2 Love ( song ) ... Janet Jackson

audio review : Discipline ( album ) … Janet Jackson

audio review : Discipline ( album ) ... Janet Jackson

When I found out that, for the first time since taking Control in 1985, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis weren’t contributing to the new Janet Jackson album, I thought, “This Can’t B Good.” It’s not. The duo; they share production credit, I suspect, even when working solo; are almost as responsible as Janet herself for making her albums good for so long. Leaving them now, as if they’re responsible for her recent decline in sales, is somewhat of a musical abomination.

Initially it doesn’t really sound like much of a loss. The music generally has a cheaper and less dynamic sound; Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis really are geniuses when it comes to composing modern soul music; but their absence isn’t instantly noticeable. Rodney Jerkins, the album’s lead producer just ahead of Jermaine Dupri, has improved a lot since his contribution to brother Michael Jackson’s Invincible project from 2001, but he’s still a poor man’s Jimmy Lewis.

Not that it’s all about beats. The vocals are supposed to be the main attraction on a Janet Jackson album and they are generally the best parts here. She didn’t help compose any of these songs, another first since Control, but her vocals still carry a better-than-average sense of melody. I’m starting to wonder if that has more to do with her voice itself, but this is still her worst album since… well, since I started listening to Janet Jackson albums.

I like The Velvet Rope, All For You, Damita Jo and 20 YO. Discipline initially sounds like those right down to the spoken-word Interludes that envelope nearly every song. Then comes the realization that the songs aren’t exactly up to par. Rock With U is a sexy dance groove that manages to outstrobe the one on Off The Wall, but most of the other songs aren’t good enough to hold-up to the standard she’s either intentionally or incidentally set for herself.

Conceptually it’s still about tender romance and raunchy sex, but this time her libido dabbles into surprising territory. The title song is a fetishistic role play that is masochistic, incestuous and even pedophilic. “Daddy, make me cry,” she whispers, leather-bound and in total submission. She’s begging to be punished, or Disciplined, for the crime of “touching” herself even though he told her not to. I can imagine the Jackson family shrink listening in horror.

my rating : 3 of 5

2008

audio review : Damita Jo ( album ) … Janet Jackson

audio review : Damita Jo ( album ) ... Janet Jackson

Damito Jo is Janet Jackson’s middle name, so the concept of this album is to give listeners a glimpse of who she is on the inside, underneath all the glitz and glamour of the diva life. “Do you think I’m that person you watch on TV,” she asks on the short title song. My answer to that question is yes because Damita Jo sounds just like the Janet Jackson we’ve known for years; a talented pop singer whose songs are caught-up in an almost obsessional fusion of romantic love and raunchy sex.

Whether she’s Spending Time With her “baby” on a tropical island or putting on an All Nite dance show at the club, it all comes down to an intimate relationship with a man. She calls it “love” and that just might be the case, but sometimes the word “love” is actually a euphemism for lust. If she’s just being herself on these songs, then Janet Damita Jo Jackson is just a typical American woman if typical American women were this honest when it came to their sexual desires and affairs.

I doubt a typical American woman would sound this sweet singing over Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis music though. All For You might’ve been her best album, but I think this one might be a little better. The Slo Love song, which isn’t slow at all as far as tempo goes, is a delicious groovefest. Just A Little While rocks. I Want You, produced with Kanye West and an old BT Express song sample; a throwback to 1970s soul music; is easily one of the best Janet Jackson songs thus far.

Any guy with a big dick who wants to trade oral sex with this girl should feel Warmth and Moist, a back-to-back face-to-groin song set that begins with Miss Jackson servicing you with her (Warm) mouth. Then it’s her turn, she insists, before lying on her back and spreading her (Moist) pussy to a jazzy piano backdrop. The outside rain is a metaphor for her juices, which, if the music is any suggestion, is about as sweet as it gets. Janet Jackson? Damita Jo? Whoever she is, I like her a lot.

my rating : 4 of 5

2004