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In
May 2006, Paris went to Miami to meet uber-producer Scott Storch,
who is known for his work with 50 Cent, Mario, Beyoncé, Chris
Brown, and Christina Aguilera. "Turn It Up" was his first
collaboration with Paris and it set a new, rhythmic direction
for the rest of the album. Storch melds a bangin' beat to a sexy
lyric and infectious melody. The song was the beginning of a
killer collaboration that generated more than half the songs on
the album.
Storch invited Fat Joe (and his larger-than-life persona) down
to the studio in Miami and they came up with this
tongue-in-cheek gem. The only question was: Who should be the
second rapper fighting for Paris' affection? Turns out it was
Jadakiss.
Originally, Paris' album had more of a guitar-driven pop/rock
direction, sort of like the Go-Go's meets Blondie. We thought
having a reggae-flavored track would be a really good fit and
break things up a bit. We asked Shep Solomon, who won this
year’s prestigious Ivor Novello Award in the U.K. for Natalie
Imbruglia's "Shiver") to write something specifically for Paris
in this vein. He brought in Fernando Garibay and Ralph McCarthy,
and "Stars" is the result. When we started doing remixes, we
reached out to the Luny Tunes (Latin Producers of the Year) to
do a reggaeton mix. They invited Wisin and Yandel to add their
magic.
While looking for one more track to add to the album, JR Rotem
(who co-wrote and produced "S.O.S." by Rihanna) and DioGuardi
(who has co-written hits for Christina Aguilera, Kelly Clarkson,
Gwen Stefani, and Ashlee Simpson) sent in this infectious song.
Rotem is well-known for his work with samples. Here, he utilizes
the horns from the title track to the Grease soundtrack to add
familiarity. Paris finished the vocals within days of it being
written.
Paris and Kara DioGuardi wrote the lyrics to this Scott Storch
track in Miami about the disintegration of a very close
friendship - due to envy, jealousy, and betrayal.
Storch came up with this contemporary update of an '80s-style
track while in Los Angeles. We ended up asking stellar lyricist
Billy Steinberg (who co-wrote Madonna's "Like A Virgin," Cyndi
Lauper's "True Colors", and Divinyls "I Touch Myself") to write
the top-line of this song, the only ballad on the album.
We asked Dr. Luke (who co-wrote and co-produced Kelly Clarkson's
"Since You've Been Gone" and "Behind These Hazel Eyes") to come
up with a song for Paris. Luke hooked up with Shep Solomon and
started writing "Nothing In This World." Once they had the
chorus and rough sketch of the lyrics, they invited Paris to
meet them at a little hole-in-the-wall studio on Sunset Blvd.
Paris was so taken with the song that she committed to cutting
it after the first listen.
This is the very first song Paris recorded; the original demo
was done before she signed her deal with Warner Bros. Records.
Written by Kara DioGuardi and Greg Wells (who has worked with
Pink, Aerosmith, Jewel, and Elton John, among countless others),
the song was coveted by numerous artists. Ultimately Paris won
out, and ended up re-recording it with Wells, DioGuardi, and Rob
Cavallo.
While recording the vocals on "Screwed," Paris, DioGuardi, and
Wells decided to write another song. The result is this upbeat,
dance-oriented track that gives listeners a taste of Paris'
confidence when she sings: "I got my eye on you boy, and when I
get my eye on something, it's like search and destroy". Storch
cooked up the beat for this song in Miami and brought it to Dr.
Dre's studio in Los Angeles, where Paris worked with Lonnie
Jackson and Taura Jackson on the lyrics and melody. Hot and sexy
in the club. After Paris and Scott came up with the idea of
covering this song while visiting Rod Stewart's home, the other
ideas for cover songs were put on the back burner. |