Many
singers claim
Michael Jackson
as an inspiration,
and have their
kid-size sparkly
gloves in frames
to prove it.
Frankie J may
be one of those
artists who
started his
performing career
in his parent's
living room
singing along
to Thriller,
but, even then,
Frankie put
his own spin
on the proceedings.
When Frankie's
family got together
for the holidays,
they would clear
the furniture
out of the room
so that he could
get down unhampered.
"I did
'Billie Jean.'
That was the
song that Michael
Jackson used
to introduce
the moonwalk
to the world,"
says Frankie
J. "My
family would
always give
me a sombrero
because, on
television,
Michael flings
a hat into the
crowd, and then
he starts to
moonwalk. I
did the same
thing he did,
I threw the
sombrero in
the air, and
then I would
moonwalk. I
was six years
old."
The
odd combination
of a sombrero
and Michael
Jackson moves
was an appropriate
prelude to Frankie's
performing career.
Years after
his preteen
living room
MJ impersonations,
Frankie J made
his mark with
a four year
stint with the
multi-platinum
Mexican-American
group, Kumbia
Kings, before
returning to
his R&B
roots with What's
A Man To Do?,
his 2003 debut
solo album.
Frankie's debut
album spawned
the bittersweet
chart-topper
"Don't
Wanna Try,"
whose video
was in heavy
rotation on
MTV's TRL.
Now,
two years after
his solo debut
and fresh off
his hit collaboration
with rapper
Baby Bash, "Suga
Suga,"
Frankie J builds
on that momentum
on The One,
his eagerly-awaited
second solo
album, which
more than delivers
on the promise
of What's A
Man To Do? Frankie's
new album is
pure unadulterated
R&B, perfectly
patterned for
slow dancing
with a special
someone, immaculately
tailored for
the dance-floors
of clubland,
and dreamily
suited for long,
late, and lonely
nights. Despite
the man's Latino
heart-throb
pedigree, do
not file The
One under "Latin
Pop."
With
The One, Frankie
J emerges as
a serious neo-soul/pop
contender; his
sensuous falsetto
putting him
in the same
general categories
as Usher and
Justin Timberlake.
And -though
Frankie J's
not wearing
a sombrero these
days, he still
adds seamless
Spanglish flourishes
to his music.
The album's
first single,
"Obsession
(No Es Amor),"
produced by
Happy Perez,
is a case in
point: its serpentine
guitar-laced
rhythm and sensual
bass line, combined
with Frankie's
soaring vocals,
communicate
the mixed emotions
associated with
a romance that's
crossing the
line into dangerous
territory. The
song is a deft
remake of a
hit by the bachata
group Aventura,
which while
packing all
the wallop of
the original,
translates its
spirit for an
English-speaking
audience.
Born
Francisco Javier
Bautista in
Tijuana, Mexico,
Frankie J has
spent his life
moving between
his Latino roots
and his American
surroundings.
When Frankie
was 2 years
old, his uncle
took him and
his siblings
north across
the border dressed
up to trick
or treat. The
family never
returned to
Tijuana, and
Frankie grew
up in San Diego
listening to
the ballads
and boleros
that his traditional
Mexican family
loved and the
soul music to
which he was
drawn. There
was music running
through Frankie's
family, his
father was the
lead singer
of a band, and
his grandfather
played violin
for the local
church. When
Frankie got
a little older,
he began listening
to freestyle,
including acts
like Lisa Lisa
and Brenda K.
Starr, but especially
dance-pop freestyle
singer George
Lamond, whose
airborne vocal
style inspired
Frankie to develop
his own voice
and unique sound.
"Usually
guys don't have
high falsettos,
and I admired
George Lamond
because I wanted
to sing that
way," Frankie
says. "I
would always
practice to
his songs, and
my pitch would
always reach
up to his level
or even higher."
Frankie began
writing songs
in high school,
and when he
was just 15,
was introduced
by a friend
to the CEO of
an independent
Canadian record
label that specialized
in freestyle.
The CEO heard
his music and
offered him
a deal. "I
was like a little
kid in a candy
store,"
says Frankie.
"I was
thrilled that
this guy had
heard my song."
He recorded
a few songs
under the moniker
Frankie Boy,
and though that
early deal didn't
lead to fame
and fortune,
it did teach
Frankie J a
few things.
"The biggest
thing I learned
was," he
says today,
"always
read the contract
before you sign
it."
After
he finished
high school,
Frankie heard
about an opportunity
to join the
Kumbia Kings,
and went to
Texas to audition.
He was selected
for the group,
and spent the
next four years
with the massively
successful Kumbia
Kings, led by
A.B. Quintanilla,
the brother
of legendary
singer Selena.
"Once we
played a show
in Monterrey,
Mexico, for
100,000 people,"
Frankie remembers.
"It was
incredible."
But
while Frankie
enjoyed sharing
in the success
of the Kumbia
Kings, he was
always working
towards a solo
career, inspired
by artists like
Brian McKnight,
K-Ci and Jo
Jo, Stevie Wonder
and Prince.
"I got
involved in
the group to
learn about
the business,
to learn about
being on the
road, and then
to branch off
with that information,"
he says.
Though
leaving the
Kumbia Kings
was a risky
move for Frankie
J, the gamble
paid off with
What's A Man
To Do? and is
compounding
maximum interest
on The One.
Frankie J is
particularly
excited about
The One's title
track produced
by Hollis hitmaker
Irv Gotti (Ja
Rule, Ashanti,
DMX, Murder
Inc.) with its
intoxicating
melody and subtle
touches of percussion.
"The minute
I heard it I
knew,"
Frankie confesses,
"it was
something magical."
The
One showcases
Frankie as a
maturing songwriter
while its production
highlights increasingly
nuanced arrangements.
"The Story
of My Life,"
for example,
is a subtle
ballad, spun
from a delicate
guitar melody
and attenuated
finger-snapping,
with Frankie
J lamenting
the inevitability,
and universality,
of hard times.
"Most
of the time,"
says Frankie,
"I write
from personal
experience.
When I don't,
it's like acting,
taking on a
role in a movie."
Another of his
favorite tracks
on the album
is the sweetly
seductive "Number
One Fan,"
which was inspired
by a special
someone in Frankie's
life. "It
talks about
being in love
with a girl
and treating
her as a star,
and you're the
groupie that's
with the girl.
Telling her
that you want
to get her autograph."
Having spent
years in the
limelight, Frankie
J turns the
tables with
"Number
One Fan."
On
The One, Frankie
J collaborates
with a variety
of heavy hitters
including the
legendary Mario
Winans who's
crafted hits
for Whitney
Houston, Mary
J. Blige and
Brian McKnight,
among others
on the striking
"Just Can't
Say It's Love."
Hot producer
Brian Michael
Cox who's worked
with Usher,
Jagged Edge,
and Nivea, to
name a few worked
with Frankie
on three dazzling
tracks on the
album, including
the tantalizing
club jam, "On
The Floor."
Frankie
J is feeling
confident about
The One and
his collaborations
with heavy hitters
like Irv Gotti,
Happy Perez,
and Brian Michael
Cox. "R&B
music has always
been in my heart,"
Frankie says.
"People
would always
doubt me and
say, 'You're
Mexican, you
don't have the
soul to make
it.' But soul
is just soul,
whatever the
ethnic background.
I think the
music speaks
for itself."