Whenever an album is titled
Naked, the odds are pretty strong that it's the second or third release from a young solo artist who wants to get personal: "I wanted to give my fans a more intimate look at who I am"; "I called this album
Naked because I'm not ashamed of my emotions"; "I just went through a lot of drama, and I'm an adult now, so these songs are very deep as a result." In
Marques Houston's case -- a solo artist with a debut behind him -- the odds are pretty strong that he means "naked" in the physical sense, not the emotional sense.
Naked is no deeper than 2003's
MH, which most of his fans will find perfectly acceptable. It offers a similar mix of earnest slow jams and sexually frank club tracks. The best moments involve adequate production facsimiles of
Just Blaze ("12 O'Clock"'s marching band punch),
Kanye West (the blissful "All Because of You," laced with a smart
Whispers sample), and
the Neptunes ("Something Else," where
Houston's falsetto is more
Michael Jackson than
Pharrell Williams). Another thing that works to
Houston's benefit is the shorter running time:
Naked's 11 songs are a lot easier to digest than
MH's 17, which also means that there's better quality control. [A clean version of the album was also released.] ~ Andy Kellman