eMusic Review 0
After 1999's Kaleidoscope, Kelis was the "I hate you so much right now" chick. After 2003's Tasty, she was the "my milkshake brings all the boys to the yard" chick. Neither did the Harlem-born singer much justice. But Tasty did predict the spiraling electro influences of so much modern pop&B (hello, Rihanna!) and made her, briefly, a star. Shepherded by production duo the Neptunes, Kelis 'smoky tone and alluring pose could have made her an R&B songstress in the mold of Mary J. Blige. But she proved too eccentric for that. "Milkshake" was the iconic, booming single she always needed, but the quieter, slinkier moments here are what make her great. "Glow," with Raphael Saadiq, recalls Anita Baker in a kush haze, and the dreamlike "Suga Honey Ice Tea" is pure sex pop, like Prince in a (tighter) bustier. The album also features two collaborations with her soon-to-be, now ex-husband, Nas, including the gross, but fascinating "In Public." Rarely do betrothed share oral sex tips on wax. But then, that's why Kelis isn't Whitney Houston.