Lindsay Lohan played a rock & roller in the 2003 remake of the classic Disney identity-change flick Freaky Friday, so perhaps it wasn't a huge stretch for her to leap from acting to singing for the teen idol, yet her 2004 debut,
Speak, still feels like a byproduct of an overdriven, overamplified celebrity culture. After all, with just two hit films under her belt,
Lindsay wasn't exactly a huge star -- particularly one with a proven track record, one who could regularly open movies or had a fan base ready to follow her to pop music. Nevertheless, it was impossible to read gossip columns, entertainment press, and blogs without reading about
Ms. Lohan, whether it was details of her feud with
Hilary Duff, debates over the authenticity of her breasts, praise for her role in Tina Fey's Mean Girls, reports of her breakup from That 70s Show actor Wilmer Valderrama, and tales of her partying. This relentless flow of stories made
Lindsay Lohan a star even to people who never saw her films, the way that the constant coverage of Paris Hilton turned the heiress into a star. And like that creation of celeb culture,
Lohan decided it was time to turn her into a multimedia, cross-platform star, instead of simply an actress, and so
Speak was recorded quickly and rushed into the stores at the end of the year. It should come as no surprise that the record sounds like a record that was created in the moment and for the moment, to be the soundtrack to
Lohan's wild year. So, there are songs that allude to her partying ways -- most explicitly on the lead single, "Rumors," where
Lindsay bats her eyes for the camera as she pleads to be left alone -- and the music is a blend of old-fashioned,
Britney-styled dance-pop and the anthemic, arena rock sound pioneered by fellow tween stars
Hilary Duff and
Ashlee Simpson.
Lohan stands apart from the pack with her party-ready attitude and her husky voice, which may be mannered but is fuller than
Britney's, and it's perfectly suited for the glitzy music on
Speak. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine