The goal of
Leona Lewis' 2007 debut
Spirit was to prove that an X Factor winner could be a phenomenon not just in the U.K. but in the rest of the world. The goal of her second album, 2009's
Echo, is to prove that success was no fluke, to build upon "Bleeding Love" and turn
Lewis into an actual diva. Certainly,
Echo in any of its incarnations -- its song listings are tailored for individual markets, with the U.K. getting a cover of
Oasis' "Stop Crying Your Heart Out," while the U.S. gets a second song co-written by
Justin Timberlake -- uses the chilly, synthesized "Bleeding Love" as its foundation, creating a sheet of sound equal parts Euro-pop and modern American R&B. As opposed to the often-stuffy
Spirit, this is proudly modern, and if the sounds emanating from the two sides of the Atlantic might seem to be aesthetically opposed, they're both producer-driven music constructed layer by layer from rhythm to the vocal, where the overall sound matters more than what's being sung. Which isn't to say that
Lewis doesn't sing the hell out of the songs on
Echo: she has an uncanny gift for hitting impossible notes without seeming as if she's grandstanding. In fact, there's nary an ounce of diva in
Lewis, she seems to enjoy singing for the sake of it, which is what keeps
Echo interesting. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine