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Natasha Bedingfield: Second Time Around
The U.K. pop princess gives classic pop props, drops sophomore
set
By Melinda Newman Special to MSN Music
Natasha Bedingfield has a secret. The pop artist confesses
that she "would love to write music like Björk; she's so intelligent and deep and amazing."
"... sometimes, completely no one recognizes you. You go to a club
and you could get turned away because you're just not hot that day ..."
At first blush, it is hardly a confession one would expect from this British
26-year-old singer who is best known for her ultra-catchy, so-bubbly-it-floats,
2006 mega-hit "Unwritten" (still ubiquitous due to its use on a Pantene
commercial) But talk to the gregarious singer/songwriter for any
length of time and her love and knowledge of many different artists comes
through—except, surprisingly, the contemporaries who are jockeying for space
alongside her at Top 40 radio. "I don't like listening to pop, that's the
thing," she says, sitting in the back lounge of the John Lennon Educational Tour
Bus, a mobile recording studio unveiled in Las Vegas at the Consumer Electronics
Show. "Actually, I only listen to old classics, old pop. I listen to the Beatles, Michael Jackson, Stevie Wonder ..."
Bedingfield returns Jan. 22 with her second album, "Pocketful of Sunshine."
The album is already off to a strong start via first single, "Love Like This,"
which features 17-year-old sensation Sean Kingston.
Hear "Pocketful of Sunshine" in the Listening
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More on the album on New This Week
MSN Music: Unlike your first album, which celebrated independence,
"Pocketful of Sunshine" is about relationships. How difficult is it to put
lyrics on a CD when you know people are going to ask you who the songs are
about?
Natasha Bedingfield: I'd been quite private with the press and [the studio]
was the place where I had to be open because I'd set that kind of challenge
to myself: to always be honest with music. And so I was like, "cool, this is
actually therapy" and it's great.
The funny thing is the reason I write songs is because it's easier to talk
about emotions in a song or in art than actually in real life and then you get
to an interview and they're like, "What was that song about?" and you're
like, "S--t, now I actually have to talk about it," you
know. The first single "Love Like This" is a sweet song
about a first love. How did you pair with Sean Kingston, who had a huge hit with
"Beautiful Girls?"
I was working in the studio with [producer] J.R. [Rotem] and he's very much
involved in the Sean Kingston thing. He showed me some of Sean's stuff and I
thought it would be really cool to get him on that track.
I felt like I needed a lighthearted song that was a love story [on the
album]. I just think it's quite sweet. It's like a relationship that never got
followed through, never got consummated. It's a nice idea and we all have those
people in our lives; we look back and we kind of realize they've always been
there and we remember to be grateful for them.
"Unwritten," which was one of the most played songs on pop radio in
2006, was written for your younger brother. How did that come
about?
At the time [I wrote it], he was 14, he's 18 now, and I didn't have a present
for him, so I'm like, "I'm going to write him a song."
So it was his birthday present?
Yes!
Does he get any royalties?
No! (laughs) A year later, I released [the song] on his birthday
and I was like, "Well, that can be your birthday present this year." And he was
like, "No, you have to give me a real present." So I gave him an Xbox.
The success of your first album catapulted you to stardom in England.
How did you deal with sudden fame?
Fame is extremely empty from my experience and it goes up and down. (Story Continues On Next Page...) |