![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgPT-psphQJVgclz1s6PbhjHQOi7TcPZtBpWhHNycZbaIS5yWZGXeGaYpY2itbPErPYhdApKusLdJTf7QI11IHN-PW1OEe_T7KyXSpImX6aODywtyrMOAYld4ZQ_Aib6_rFHlX26zyyQTw/s320/5679-enrique-iglesias-11-640x480.jpg)
Not many men shall penetrate my online diva shrine, but
Enrique Iglesias is welcome to enter like a friend with benefits is in a phone book - he is there when you need him. His music is a lot of things, but often a triumph of shimmering
Metro elegance or else over-produced pop dimensions. To think his 'mainstream' breakthrough might have been very different had it not been for
Gina G's wistfull flamenco flutter
Ti Amo is a valid point. His 'debut' was a full stomach of often hard to digest romance - thankfully Metro added that rather special seductive gelid dancefloor teasing glint that defines half of his trademark sound even to this day with the recent hit
Do You Know.
On
Enrique it is clear considerable calculation had gone into the affair -
Rick Nowells &
Billy Steinberg snatch the pay check and dutifully deliver the precautious, albeit highly generic,
I Have Always Loved You,
Sad Eyes is a believably maudlin Bruce Springstein cover and Madonna's former collab-whore
Patrick Leonard certifies the qualified mid-tempo slice
I'm Your Man. Frankly, a cover of
La Isla Bonita would have been a revelation.
On his own merits, if
it had not been for the hot air of
Bailamos,
Oye Me is imaginable as his only other shot here at giving
Ricky Martin any serious package-packing chart contention even if it is admittedly tepid and trite. 2nd single
Rhythm Divine is the best thing here, dripping with flourishing beauty, and
Be With You was an American #1.
Whitney Houston's chemistry-free duet blows up in smoke and watch the video
here to realize how alarmingly asexual Enrique can appear at times.
You're My #1 is another pause for thought ballad wherein he tried for a second time to demonstrate his hetrosexuality much more confidently with Alsou, but this album version is a solo climax.
With
Enrique, Enrique mounted a pop ballad crusade that shows the beginning of his grand construction as a worldwide pop idol. He would find a more fitting persona in his subsequently more polished albums, but this record offers an innocent contrived charm and even contains the odd gem or otherwise sporadic glimpse of a performer poised for a grander scale.
Rhythm DivineBe With YouI'm Your ManBailamos