In the winter of 2010, Hollywood released a film that was less a critical darling and more a cultural curiosity: Burlesque . Starring Cher (returning to the big screen after seven years) and pop titan Christina Aguilera (in her feature film debut), the movie was a backstage musical draped in fishnet stockings and rhinestones. The plot—a small-town girl saves a glamorous but struggling neo-burlesque club—was thin. But the soundtrack? That was a different story entirely.
In hindsight, the album represents a final hurrah for a certain type of maximalist pop. Before streaming made everything minimalist and lo-fi, Burlesque was loud, proud, and over-the-top. It’s the sound of two generations of divas fighting for the spotlight and realizing there is enough room for both. Burlesque Original Motion Picture Soundtrack -2010-
The centerpiece is the duet, A thumping, brass-and-bass-driven track produced by Tricky Stewart, it’s pure, unapologetic fun. Cher’s weathered, authoritative purr plays perfectly against Aguilera’s laser-sharp belts. It’s not a competition; it’s a conversation. In the winter of 2010, Hollywood released a