A beautiful woman with luscious body, Nicole Scherzinger makes sure to tease her asset to her fans. After posing as a venomous woman and kicking bad guys as superhero costume in a telephone booth of the first single "Poison" video, the 32-year-old singer now strips at the back of her ride, and has released a music video for her follow up new bouncy pop song "Don't Hold Your Breath," which is a simple, melodious, easy on the ear, catchy with an electro-pop/dance beat and voila, shows her vulnerable side. She cries over a break-up, wailing on a moving car but never looking back at what she left.
Poor pussycat doll! Scherzinger looks like she lapped up some sour milk in the video for her upcoming UK single "Don't Hold Your Breath," that sampled a song originally written by Timbaland and Keri Hilson and was remixed by Dave Aude, is expected to make the second cut to Scherzinger's first solo studio album which was supposed to be out in 2008 and suffered a lot of push-backs. Although the message is clear, "Don't Hold Your Breath" is fairly uptempo for a gloomy song. The song's title may also have a correlation to the infinitely delayed debut album, which will apparently finally hit the shelves later this year. Or maybe next year?
Against her advice, you can at least do so until she finishes changing her clothes in the taxi scene. Offering self-empowered visuals, the Rich Lee-directed video sees the former lead Pussycat Doll singer struggling to cope with her broken heart, and shows her acting skills by portraying a very depressed, bitter and angry girlfriend who has taken a long taxi ride back home after having her heart broken by her lover. Doing a full 180-turn, director Rich Lee transforms the sexy Dancing With The Stars winner from the luscious, red-hot woman in "Poison" into a depressed and angry ex-girlfriend. Lee chose an abandoned house backdrop to suggest the haunting memories of a shattered relationship.
Her latest pop offering is about leaving a bad relationship behind. But in the video for "Don't Hold Your Breath," Scherzinger ensures the unnamed gentleman she sings about knows exactly what he's missing. She rides around in the clip in the backseat of a car while it's raining, looking properly angst-ridden over a boy who apparently only brought her "a heart full of pain." Despite the saucy images, "Don't Hold Your Breath" is an angst-ridden break-up song. The video was one of those self-empowered visuals after a woman encounters a break-up. It started decent but would have made for a better clip if it had a storyline or some type of concept.
Poor pussycat doll! Scherzinger looks like she lapped up some sour milk in the video for her upcoming UK single "Don't Hold Your Breath," that sampled a song originally written by Timbaland and Keri Hilson and was remixed by Dave Aude, is expected to make the second cut to Scherzinger's first solo studio album which was supposed to be out in 2008 and suffered a lot of push-backs. Although the message is clear, "Don't Hold Your Breath" is fairly uptempo for a gloomy song. The song's title may also have a correlation to the infinitely delayed debut album, which will apparently finally hit the shelves later this year. Or maybe next year?
Against her advice, you can at least do so until she finishes changing her clothes in the taxi scene. Offering self-empowered visuals, the Rich Lee-directed video sees the former lead Pussycat Doll singer struggling to cope with her broken heart, and shows her acting skills by portraying a very depressed, bitter and angry girlfriend who has taken a long taxi ride back home after having her heart broken by her lover. Doing a full 180-turn, director Rich Lee transforms the sexy Dancing With The Stars winner from the luscious, red-hot woman in "Poison" into a depressed and angry ex-girlfriend. Lee chose an abandoned house backdrop to suggest the haunting memories of a shattered relationship.
Her latest pop offering is about leaving a bad relationship behind. But in the video for "Don't Hold Your Breath," Scherzinger ensures the unnamed gentleman she sings about knows exactly what he's missing. She rides around in the clip in the backseat of a car while it's raining, looking properly angst-ridden over a boy who apparently only brought her "a heart full of pain." Despite the saucy images, "Don't Hold Your Breath" is an angst-ridden break-up song. The video was one of those self-empowered visuals after a woman encounters a break-up. It started decent but would have made for a better clip if it had a storyline or some type of concept.
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