Paris

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  • Artist: Paris Hilton
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: August 22, 2006
  • Total Time: 39:50
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

As everybody knows, Paris Hilton is famous simply for existing. Even before she was a household name the heiress to the Hilton hotel fortune was famous in certain circles, partially because of her pedigree, partially because she was at every exclusive party, partially because of her very name, an instantly memorable and malleable moniker that spawned T-shirts ("Paris Hilton Is Burning") and gossip websites alike. All this hipster activity was bound to spill over into the mainstream and it did in a spectacular fashion in 2003 when she and Nicole Richie -- her best friend for life circa 2003 -- starred in the reality series The Simple Life, which saw the two pampered socialites attempting to fit into the real world of Wal-Marts and roadhouse saloons. Just before the series hit the airwaves, a sex tape of Paris with her ex-boyfriend Rick Solomon was leaked to the Internet and the resulting media hoopla of the show and the porn made Paris a bona fide celebrity. Pretty soon, she was everywhere and she began dabbling in almost every part of the entertainment industry, from film to fashion. What all these projects had in common is that they all featured Paris as Paris -- even when she was getting whacked in House of Wax, she wasn't really playing a character -- and in all of them her presence never matched her persona, which always was more compelling as seen through the prism of tabloids. She seemed destined to never deliver any project that would justify her fame, and it certainly seemed that the album that she spent two years recording would not be the project that would be a flat-out success -- that prolonged gestation for a pop album nearly guarantees trouble of some kind.

Amazingly, that long-to-materialize album (it's hard to call it highly anticipated) turns out to be shockingly good -- and not just according to a grading curve for actors-turned-singers. After all, Paris was never an actress to begin with; she was a media creation who peddled the same image to a number of different formats, and it just so happens that her sexy, spoiled, shallow act is perfectly suited for bubblegum pop. Of course, it helps that she has a crack team of professionals supporting her on Paris, chief among them songwriter Kara DioGuardi and producer/co-writer Scott Storch, who is name-dropped on the first song, "Turn It Up," and leaves a heavy imprint on the rest of the record, producing just over half of it and serving as one of the executive producers along with Tom Whalley and Paris herself. They come up with a sound that's casually modern and retro with enough heft in its rhythms to sound good at clubs, yet it's designed to be heard outdoors on the sunniest day of the summer. This is exceedingly light music, as sweet and bubbly as a wine spritzer, yet it isn't so frothy that it floats away. Like the best lightweight pop, Paris retains its sense of fun through repeated listens, long past the point that the novelty of Paris Hilton releasing a good album has worn off.

Make no mistake, Paris is a very good pop album, at times deliberately reminiscent of Blondie, Madonna, and Gwen Stefani, yet having its own distinct character -- namely, Paris' persona, which is shamelessly shallow and devoid of any depth. Where that might be irritating within a movie or within pop culture at large, when placed in a shiny, hooky dance-pop album it works splendidly, particularly because the songs are strong and Storch and company know how to keep things light -- and everybody involved knows that it's fun to play around with Paris' image, no matter if it's her murmuring "that's hot" at the beginning of the record or covering Rod Stewart's "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy," or writing about her feud with Nicole Ritchie on the delightful "Jealousy." But for as much as Paris is about Paris, she doesn't necessarily stand out here; her voice -- which is almost certainly auto-tuned and tweaked by a computer, yet it's nevertheless appealing, more so than Britney Spears' often awkward squawk -- may blend into the production, yet that actually helps the recordings since it emphasizes the melodies above everything else. And there are some irresistible melodies here: the breezy "Stars Are Blind," the gilded rush of "I Want You" driven by a "Grease" sample, the sweet "Time After Time" rewrite "Heartbeat," and the great power pop of "Screwed," for starters.

Yes, there is no denying that this is a pure piece of product, but it is indeed pure as product. Paris makes no apologies for being mass-market pop, but everybody involved made sure that this was well-constructed mass-market pop. It may not bear the mark of an auteur the way Christina Aguilera's Back to Basics does, but it never feels tossed-off, and track-for-track it's more fun than anything released by Britney Spears or Jessica Simpson, and a lot fresher, too. It's easy to hate Paris Hilton -- lord knows that she and her friends like Brandon Davis are walking advertisements against the repeal of the estate tax -- but any pop fan who listens to Paris with an open mind will find that it's nothing but fun. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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  • Genres: Folk

Biography

Blue-eyed soul singer Bobby Paris was born and raised in New York City -- the product of a Puerto Rican family, he began singing with a neighborhood doo wop group called the Golden Keys in 1956. He signed with the Indigo label to issue his debut single "Rockin' Concerto" in 1960, followed a year later by the Magenta release "Dark Continent." Paris skipped from independent label to independent label over the next few years, landing with Jolar for 1962's "Is It You," Jairick for 1963's "Are You the One," and Chattahoochee for 1965's "Love Passed Me By." His first and biggest hit was 1966's "Night Owl" -- based on a melody Paris composed on piano at the age of five, the single was a huge hit and kept its struggling label Cameo/Parkway financially solvent. Paris then signed to Capitol, making his label debut with the 1967 ballad "I Walked Away" -- the company also hired him on as a producer, and that same year, he co-produced Bobbie Gentry's country-pop classic "Ode to Billie Joe." Both "Per-So-Nal-Ly" and "Bye, Bye Blackbird" appeared in 1968, and after releasing a rendition of the Hair perennial "Let the Sunshine In" the following year, Paris was silent until 1973, when he issued two final Capitol singles, "Baby, Spread Your Love on Me" and ""Love Looks So Good on You." In the years to follow, "Night Owl," "I Walked Away," and "Per-So-Nal-Ly" all emerged as enduring anthems of Britain's Northern Soul club culture, a fact lost on Paris himself until he was contacted in 1999 to appear in the documentary film The Strange World of Northern Soul -- he later performed live at the film's premiere party as well. ~ Jason Ankeny, Rovi
Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Paris (Paris Hilton album)

Top
Paris
Studio album by Paris Hilton
Released August 22, 2006
Recorded 2004–2006
Genre Pop, dance-pop, turbo-folk
Length 39:55
Label Warner Bros.
Producer Paris Hilton (exec.), Tom Whalley (exec.), Dr. Luke, Fernando Garibay, Greg Wells, J. R. Rotem, Kara DioGuardi, Rob Cavallo, Sheppard Soloman, Scott Storch (also exec.)
Singles from Paris
  1. "Stars Are Blind"
    Released: June 5, 2006
  2. "Turn It Up"
    Released: July 15, 2006
  3. "Nothing in This World"
    Released: September 12, 2006
  4. "Screwed"
    Released: February 17, 2007
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars[1]
Billboard (positive)[2]
Blender 3.9/5 stars[3]
Entertainment Weekly (B)[4]
Robert Christgau (dud)[5]
Rolling Stone 1.7/5 stars[6]
Slant Magazine 2/5 stars[7]
The Guardian 3/5 stars[8]
The Observer 2.4/5 stars[9]
Yahoo! Music UK 4/10 stars[10]

Paris is the debut studio album by American media personality and singer Paris Hilton, released on her own label, Heiress Records, in association with Warner Bros. Records. The album was released in the United States on August 22, 2006. The entire album was posted on AOL Music on August 13, 2006, causing the album to be leaked on the Internet before the release date.

As of March 2011, the album has sold 197,000 copies in the US.[11]

Contents

Production

Hilton first announced plans to record an album in 2003, and began early collaborations with Romeo Antonio and JC Chasez.[12] In 2004, she met with producer Rob Boldt and began recording demo tracks. While collaborating with Boldt, Hilton was pitched the song "Screwed,"[13] which was written by Kara DioGuardi and Greg Wells, and began talking about it in many interviews, saying it would be the first single from the album. That same summer, Haylie Duff said in an interview that "Screwed" was actually going to be recorded by her previously and would be the first single from her album, followed by a legal battle for the song.[14] In August 2004, a lo-fi leak of Hilton's recording of the song circulated onto the Internet from an Orlando radio station airing, which complicated the legal battle behind the song.[15] Not long afterwards, Duff was dropped by Hollywood Records which allowed Hilton to claim the song as hers. The album was tentatively titled "Paris Is Burning" and reports were made about collaborations with Lil Jon[16] and The Black Eyed Peas.[17] "Screwed" was the only track to appear on the album from any her recording sessions in 2004.

In 2005, Hilton was signed to Warner Bros. Records[18] for distribution of her album and began working with Rob Cavallo. Initially, Cavallo was set to serve as producer for the entire record, who had recorded a retooled, rockier version of "Screwed" and was still intended to be the first single. The album was described to be "Blondie meets The Go Go's, and Hilton confirmed a cover of Blondie's Heart Of Glass would appear on the album. The album's sound shifted after meeting with Scott Storch in Miami in late 2005, Hilton decided to record a more hip-hop/R&B influenced tracks,[19] and Storch assumed executive producer for the album. After months of collaboration with Storch, with contributions from Fernando Garibay, Dr. Luke, J.R. Rotem, and Greg Wells, Paris was finally complete and ready for release.

"Turn It Up" was planned as the lead single for the album, and was commissioned for remixes by Paul Oakenfold, Peter Rauhofer, and Tracy Young. It premiered at the Winter Music Conference in March 2006, but a last minute decision was made to release "Stars Are Blind," and was sent for radio adds in May. Produced by Garibay, "Stars Are Blind" was released digitally June 20 and as a CD-maxi single on July 18, and peaked at No. 18 on the Billboard Hot 100; "Nothing in This World" and "Turn It Up" followed as worldwide singles.

Critical reception

Critical reception was generally mixed.[20] Allmusic commented that the album was "more fun than anything released by Britney Spears or Jessica Simpson, and a lot fresher, too." At Metacritic, the album received an average score of 57, based on 17 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews.[21]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "Turn It Up"   Scott Storch, Penelope Magnet,
Jeff Bowden, Paris Hilton
Scott Storch 3:12
2. "Fightin' Over Me" (featuring Fat Joe & Jadakiss) Storch, Magnet, Hilton, Fat Joe, Jadakiss, Alonzo Jackson, Taura Jackson Scott Storch 4:01
3. "Stars Are Blind"   Fernando Garibay, Sheppard Solomon, Ralph McCarthy Fernando Garibay, Sheppard Solomon (co.) 3:56
4. "I Want You"   Johnathan Rotem, Kara DioGuardi, Evan "Kidd" Bogart, Barry Gibb Johnathan "J.R." Rotem 3:12
5. "Jealousy"   Storch, DioGuardi, Hilton Scott Storch 3:40
6. "Heartbeat"   Storch, Billy Steinberg, Josh Alexander Scott Storch 3:43
7. "Nothing in This World"   Lukasz Gottwald, Solomon Dr. Luke 3:10
8. "Screwed"   DioGuardi, Greg Wells Greg Wells 3:41
9. "Not Leaving Without You"   DioGuardi, Wells, Hilton Greg Wells, Kara DioGuardi 3:35
10. "Turn You On"   Storch, Hilton, A. Jackson, T. Jackson, Courtney Triggs Scott Storch 3:06
11. "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy"   Rod Stewart, Carmine Appice, Duane Hitchings Scott Storch 4:34

Sales and chart performance

Chart (2006) Peak
position
Australian ARIA Albums Chart[22] 24
Austrian Albums Chart[22] 9
Belgian Ultratop 50 Albums (Flanders)[22] 18
Belgian Ultratop 50 Albums (Wallonia)[23] 49
Canadian Albums Chart[24] 4
Danish Albums Chart[22] 20
Dutch Albums Chart[22] 28
Finnish Albums Chart[22] 17
French Albums Chart[22] 67
German Albums Chart[22] 18
Greek International Albums Chart 11
Hungarian Albums Chart[25] 40
Irish Albums Chart[22] 27
Italian Albums Chart 22
Japanese Oricon Albums Chart 8
New Zealand RIANZ Albums Chart[22] 16
Spanish Albums Chart 98
Swedish Albums Chart[22] 6
Swiss Albums Chart[22] 7
UK Albums Chart[22] 29
U.S. Billboard 200[22] 6

References

  1. ^ Paris (Paris Hilton album) at Allmusic
  2. ^ Billboard magazine review
  3. ^ Blender magazine review
  4. ^ Entertainment Weekly review
  5. ^ Robert Christgau review
  6. ^ Rolling Stone review
  7. ^ Slant Magazine review
  8. ^ The Guardian review
  9. ^ The Observer review
  10. ^ Yahoo! Music review
  11. ^ Caulfield, Keith (9 March 2011). "Kim Kardashian vs. Paris Hilton: Whose Debut Single Sold More?". Billboard. Prometheus Global Media. http://www.billboard.com/news/kim-kardashian-vs-paris-hilton-whose-debut-1005066052.story#/news/kim-kardashian-vs-paris-hilton-whose-debut-1005066052.story. Retrieved 11 March 2011. 
  12. ^ "Paris Hilton Hooks Up With Lil Jon, Shares Her Horsemeat Gross-Out". http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1489998/leak-complicates-paris-haylie-song-fight.jhtml. Retrieved 2004-08-05. 
  13. ^ "Ashlee And Hilary's Hitmaker Is Eager To Work With Paris Hilton". http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1497809/ashlees-hitmaker-work-with-paris-hilton.jhtml. 
  14. ^ "MTV News". http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1490143/20040812/story.jhtml. Retrieved 2004-08-12. 
  15. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1489998/leak-complicates-paris-haylie-song-fight.jhtml
  16. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1494018/paris-hilton-hooks-up-with-lil-jon.jhtml
  17. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1490683/paris-going-ahead-with-rock-screwed.jhtml
  18. ^ "Paris Hilton signs recording contract". http://www.digitalspy.com/celebrity/news/a28439/paris-hilton-signs-recording-contract.html. Retrieved 2006-01-26. 
  19. ^ http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1508759/scott-storch-calls-paris-music-amazing.jhtml
  20. ^ "Paris Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic". Metacritic.com. http://www.metacritic.com/music/artists/hiltonparis/paris?q=paris. Retrieved 2012-03-04. 
  21. ^ "Paris Reviews, Ratings, Credits, and More at Metacritic". Metacritic.com. http://www.metacritic.com/music/paris. Retrieved 2012-03-04. 
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Paris Hilton – Paris – αCharts.us
  23. ^ Belgian Ultratop 50 Albums (Wallonia)
  24. ^ Paris Hilton – Paris – Allmusic
  25. ^ Hungarian Albums Chart

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