Product Details
Speak

Speak
Lindsay Lohan, Lindsay Lohan

Price: $13.98 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 1 to 2 days
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

146 new or used available from $0.05

Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. First
  2. Nobody 'Til You
  3. Symptoms Of You
  4. Speak
  5. Over
  6. Something I Never Had
  7. Anything But Me
  8. Disconnected
  9. To Know Your Name
  10. Very Last Moment In Time
  11. Rumors
  12. Bonus Track 1

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #29688 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-12-07
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Format: Enhanced

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Lindsay Lohan leaps into her much anticipated debut CD with a blast of something that simulates warmed-over Led Zeppelin (the lyrically ferocious "First") and from there finesses it into a stylish experiment in pounding away at teen pop's predictability. Influences--not all of whom her 8-to-14-year-old fans will flip to, or even find, in their pinup mags--loom large: While the Ashlee Simpson-like rocker "Nobody 'Til You" winds into the Jessica Simpson-y "Symptoms of You," the lovelorn "Something I Never Had," taps a sweetly unself-conscious vocal vein that owes gratitude to the otherwise highly un-Lohan-like Lisa Loeb. Though Lohan might balk at the comparison--she is, after all, the "Ultimate"-spawning original teenage drama queen--fellow tween queen Hilary Duff's stamp is pressed firmly into stormy self-explorers like "Disconnected" and "Anything But Me." Where "Speak" intones loudest, though, is in its least-rocking, most beat-propelled songs: The title track dips and bounces tantalizingly, begging hands-in-the-air listeners to "c'mon and let it out"; "To Know Your Name" digitizes a sexy hip-hop inflected dance number; and "Rumors," a J. Lo-like thumper (and one in a trifecta of pouts over the pitfalls of stardom) ends this disc on a don't-stop, bound-for-diva-dom note. -Tammy La Gorce

About the Artist
In 2003, Lindsay starred in Disney's remake of Freaky Friday, a role that was originated by Jodie Foster. Lindsay starred opposite Jamie Lee Curtis, who recently received a 2004 Golden Globe Nomination for her role in the film. Lindsay also appears on the movie's soundtrack singing the main theme song, `Ultimate.' Lindsay recently starred in Disney's Confessions of a Teenage Drama Queen, in which she also can be heard singing two of the songs for the movie's soundtrack and also starred in Paramount's Mean Girls directed by Mark Waters and written by Tina Fey. She recently hosted the "2004 MTV Movie Awards" and won the award for `Female Breakout Out Star.

Lindsay is currently in production on Disney's remake of Herbie, the Love Bug, titled `HERBIE: Fully Loaded' directed by Angela Robinson.' Her upcoming projects include Lady Luck, directed by Donald Petrie for Fox-Regency, and she star and co-produce the Paramount project, Fashionistas.

Lindsay is following her music aspirations and has recently signed with Tommy Mottola's Casablanca Records. Lindsay was born on Long Island, New York and separates her time between Los Angeles and New York.


Customer Reviews

Not bad but 2nd was better5
This album wasn't too bad but I perferred her second album more. There were good songs like "Over" "First" "Speak" "Symptoms Of You"

She speaks too much1
A terrific thing for children at 2 or 3. If you're 4 y.o you should be disappointed.

Lindsay's Best : This Was Actually GREAT!5
As a fan of anything pop/rock, I went into this album with minimal expectations and returned having discovered a CD that is infinitely better than both Ashlee Simpsons' "I Am Me" or "Autobiography".

Great songs abound here - "Symptoms of You" is the standout due to its' catchy chorus, and the lead single "Rumors" sounds like something Britney Spears accidentally forgot to release as HER first single (meaning its good). I especially liked "To Know Your Name". I can imagine putting this on during a party and the crowd going wild.

The sad part is that the best song recorded for this album, "Magnet", was totally left off the US Edition of the CD (which is the version you are currently reading about). This is a Eurythmics meets Cyndi Lauper pop song in a very '80s vein - this was just so different from anything else on the CD, and it was obviously the best thing here. Too bad, however you can get it on the Japanese Version of the CD as an import, or just search the interwebs for it.

Most people hate Lohan, but I listened to this album hardly having watched her in anything. This worked for me, because I could appreciate the album for what it is - a solid pop/rock album that is better than other divas of the same age group, i.e. Jojo, Hilary Duff, Ashlee Simpson etc. This album is the pick of that pack, so you might want to pick this up pronto.