Natalie keeps good company. The urban pop singer from Houston is part of Latium Entertainment, which is headed by hitmaking producer Happy Perez and is home to balladeer
Frankie J and ladies' man
Baby Bash, both of whom were riding high on the pop charts alongside
Natalie when she made her self-titled debut in May 2005. Her lead single, "Goin' Crazy," was giving
J's "Obsession (No Es Amor)" and
Bash's "Baby I'm Back" a run for their money on the Billboard Hot 100 at the time, all three songs within the Top 50 the week
Natalie hit stores. Clearly the folks at Latium were onto something with their rash of high-riding chart hits, and after a close examination of
Natalie, that special something seems to be a fine-tuned sense of popcraft, especially on behalf of Happy Perez. This guy made a name for himself producing hardcore Latino rappers in the late '90s, but in the few years running up to the release of
Natalie, he began branching out and producing all sorts of hits. So it's not really a surprise to see him produce the bulk of this balladic urban pop effort -- every song except "Goin' Crazy" and the pair of bonus tracks on this reasonably brief 12-song album. He brings a bit of a hip-hop vibe to the proceedings, but he mainly sticks in contemporary pop territory. For instance, think
Beyoncé or
Ciara or
Ashanti with a Latina twist. Better yet, simply think
Frankie J with a feminine twist. For sure,
Natalie fits right into the contemporary pop star template circa summer 2005, and there's a wealth of pop star-worthy music here. The first two songs -- "Goin' Crazy" and "Energy," the former a lovestruck ballad, the latter a boy-girl slow jam graced with a dope beat and a
Baby Bash feature -- are well-crafted pop songs so sticky sweet they alone should make this album successful. But there's more, including another beat-driven boy-girl slow jam ("Better Get It Right" featuring
Max Minelli), a seductive late-night come-on ("Ooh"), and a fun '80s-throwback cover ("I Can't Wait," a club favorite from
Nu Shooz in 1986). If you're down with the other Latium artists, or if you like fellow urban pop sweethearts like
Ciara,
Natalie is tailor-made to suit your taste. Plus, there's a curious pair of covers that make the album all the more inviting: an American Idol-style number featuring Justin Roman of Making the Band celebrity ("Where Are You") and a Spanish-language version of "Goin' Crazy" that just might top the original. ~ Jason Birchmeier