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<pre class="nfo">ARTIST: Lindsay Lohan<br />
TITLE: A Little More Personal (Raw)<br />
LABEL: Casablanca<br />
GENRE: Pop<br />
BITRATE: 214kbps avg<br />
PLAYTIME: 0h 43min total<br />
RELEASE DATE: 2005-12-06<br />
RIP DATE: 2005-11-23<br />
<br />
Track List<br />
----------<br />
01. Confessions Of A Broken Heart 3:40<br />
(Daughter To Father)<br />
02. Black Hole 4:02<br />
03. I Live For The Day 3:10<br />
04. I Want You To Want Me 3:09<br />
05. My Innocence 4:18<br />
06. A Little More Personal 2:59<br />
07. If It's Alright 4:06<br />
08. If You Were Me 2:54<br />
09. Fastlane 3:24<br />
10. Edge Of Seventeen 4:23<br />
11. Who Loves You 3:50<br />
12. A Beautiful Life (La Bella 3:25<br />
Vita)<br />
<br />
Release Notes:<br />
<br />
Lindsay Lohan is delivering on her promise to get A Little More Personal on her<br />
sophomore album, taking to task all the men who've done her wrong, starting<br />
with dear old dad.<br />
<br />
Lindsay pulls no punches on the album, subtitled Raw, when she gets to the<br />
topic of Michael Lohan, currently serving a four-year prison term for multiple<br />
crimes, including driving while intoxicated and assault. He's already the focus<br />
of the first single, "Confessions of a Broken Heart (Daughter to Father)," in<br />
which she questions if he ever loved her, but she also berates him in "My<br />
Innocence" for allegedly stealing her childhood away. "You broke me in with<br />
your mistakes," she sings. "Thanks for the breakthrough." Still, she vows to be<br />
resilient and says she's more independent because he wasn't there to look after<br />
her.<br />
<br />
Next on Lindsay's list are lost loves - those who sent her mixed messages ("A<br />
Little More Personal") or cast her aside for another woman too carelessly ("If<br />
You Were Me"). She mourns one in "Black Hole," getting paper cuts re-reading<br />
old love letters, realizes another was a bad fit two years too late in "If<br />
It's Alright," but saves her venom for the one she wishes were as "desperate<br />
and dying inside" as the way he made her feel in "I Live for the Day": "I live<br />
for the tears to fall down your face."<br />
<br />
Lindsay is more dimensional than just a woman scorned, though - she's also<br />
questioning her life as a star, which might be "A Beautiful Life" but that<br />
doesn't stop her from feeling worn out. She prays to God because sometimes she<br />
just doesn't know who else would listen, or if she dares let them: "I talk in<br />
my sleep/ That's the one place I know no one can hear me." And she realizes<br />
the incongruity of wishing people would care when she doesn't let them in the<br />
first place. On "Fast Lane" she sings, "So I drive around this superficial<br />
town/ With a smile on my face/ No one really knows how I feel inside/ And I'm<br />
keeping it that way."<br />
<br />
Lindsay's sound also gets more Raw - she's teamed up with former Evanescence<br />
guitarist Ben Moody and Marvelous 3's Butch Walker as her producers to bring<br />
out her inner rock chick. Moody helps her cover Stevie Nicks' "Edge of<br />
Seventeen" while Walker assists on her take on Cheap Trick's "I Want You to<br />
Want Me."<br />
<br />
A Little More Personal (Raw) is due December 6.</pre>
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