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Nelly Furtado loosens up on her sexy third album
By Brandon Voss

Nelly Furtado wants to hear all about the guys who grooved,
the go-gos who grinded, and the drag queens who lip-synched
to her music at Gay Pride this summer. Because, much to her
disappointment, the 27-year-old Portuguese-Canadian singer
has been far too busy promoting her latest album, Loose,
to make any Pride appearances herself. Even so, she's thrilled
to know she was there in spirit; “Promiscuous,” the
disc's steamy lead single, has been the unofficial anthem
of Pride parties and parades across the country, making Furtado
our unofficial queen.
“I will gladly take that throne this year,” she
says. “It's a good throne to be sitting on. My gay
audience has expanded threefold just in the last six months
since my new songs have been on the Internet. It's crazy.
Now I've got to do a song just for my gay audience. Shout
out! This one's for my gays!” And what would be the
title of this queer tribute? “Just, 'Happiness.'”
The feeling's certainly mutual when it comes to Loose,
a sultry collection of hip-hop party anthems and R&B
slow jams that even flirts with reggaeton and '80s synth-pop.
Though she claims the major theme of “individuality
and living your life without borders” runs through
all of her albums, Furtado's third album is quite a departure
from her multiplatinum 2000 debut Whoa, Nelly!—which
yielded the Grammy-winning “I'm Like a Bird”—and
Folklore, her 2003 follow-up.
“I'm not faithful to one musical style,” Furtado
says. “I'm a musically promiscuous girl. It's important
to reinvent myself because life changes every day, and as
a human being, I hope to constantly evolve. On this new album,
I chose to focus on urban and hip-hop—my first musical
love—because I hadn't officially given my fans that
yet. I just hinted at it, so it's something I wanted to fully
embrace as an experiment.” The experimentation has
certainly paid off: Both the album and its lead single have
shot to the top of the Billboard charts.
Much of this success can be attributed to superstar producer
Timbaland, who also duets with Furtado on “Promiscuous.” Previously,
the pair most notably collaborated when Furtado spiced up
a 2001 remix of Missy Elliott's “Get Ur Freak On.” “It's
almost like we made a musical promise to people on a couple
of tracks, so this new album is like a fulfillment of that
promise,” Furtado says.
The duo still gets freaky on Loose. While she's not surprised “Promiscuous” has
connected with the gay community—“It's fun, flirty
and unabashedly, unapologetically sexy,” she explains—Furtado's
not worried about catching flack from conservatives. “I
encourage safe, healthy, responsible promiscuity, but I'm
not trying to promote anything. That word could've been changed
to 'sexy' or 'mysterious.' It's just about that anticipation
of checking people out.”
Yet neither the steamy track nor its accompanying video
featuring Justin Timberlake is indicative of typical night
clubbing with Furtado. “At the end of the day, it's
a fantasy for me, too, because I'm a mom—my daughter
Nevis is going to be turning 3—and I don't get a chance
to go out that much. But sometimes I do like to go out and
let off steam so I have some balance in my life.” She
also promises to visit more gay clubs with her dancers while
on tour.
Motherhood may have mellowed her lifestyle—“I
don't take things too seriously anymore,” she says—but
childbirth has only intensified her sexy look and sound. “I'm
appreciating my body for the first time and realizing, ‘Oh,
that's what these hips are for!’ All of a sudden you
realize what a wonderful machine your body is. The sexiness
has just evolved out of that organically,
and I think that's why people are responding to it positively.
They can see it comes from within and that it's not something
I'm putting on.”
This vibe is perhaps most evident in the album's pulsating,
tribal-sounding second single, “Maneater,” which
is so hot that it literally set a speaker on fire in the
recording studio. “In the video we encouraged the dancers
to dance as though they were by themselves dancing in their
underwear in front of a mirror. I'm sure every gay person
can relate to that. Well, maybe not all of them, but the
ones dancing at the Pride parades!”
While Furtado has “discovered how lovely it is to
be vulnerable,” she'll admit that some male suitors
might describe her as a maneater herself. “I grew up
with a lot of strong women. I don't really have role models—I
have icons in my family. It's easy to become a maneater because
you become so strong you don't really need a man.”
Whoa, Nelly! “Okay, yes, everybody needs a man,” she
concedes with a laugh. “Especially a hot alpha male!
That's my new thing.”
The queen wears her crown so well.
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