Divided into a main disc and a digital only third portion, the album is pure psychotic retro.

Sex Appeal, Love, Confessions Parts 1 & 2 / NON-ALBUM SINGLE: “Reach Out and Touch Me”
An attempt at recreating retro 1960′s free spirit folk, psychadelic love stories, bold lyrics and pop using modern Top 40 pop synthesizers, rock and hip hop beats, this album will take you through many genres and subject matter all disclosing drama involving – surprise – sex appeal, love and a few confessions. Available in censored and uncensored versions.
“My goal was to do a 60′s album in 2010. I tried hard to sound like I was! I know how much that doesn’t make any sense. It also combines different musical styles I like into one. I experimented a lot. I tried to sound really rough. Some of it was meant to be also like a girl just hanging out in her bedroom during this era, writing poetry and singing aloud to herself. It doesn’t have any deeper meaning or that whole ‘done’ aspect of trying to sound ‘perfect.’ It just is what it is.”

My Other Half! Sex Appeal, Love, Confessions Part 3
Known for its “Don’t Ride the White Horse” cover, the continuation of “Sex Appeal, Love, Confessions Parts 1 & 2″ features everything left off the album: 1970′s infused funk, early disco feeling drama and more confessions. Available only in explicit.
“Ahh! I know, I know. Of everything I have done, people don’t understand this one. Hmm! I guess because it is not super mainstream. I really wanted this ‘second’ bit to be like the crazy, psychedelic albums people put out in the late 60′s and early 70′s. People then screamed, got really emotional and at times, didn’t make much sense but what they were saying ultimately did make sense when you thought about it. So to kids and people who only hear mainstream work, no, this isn’t Beyoncé’s ‘Crazy in Love.’ Older people who lived back then may appreciate it more and know what I meant to do. Back then, people weren’t concerned with belting out. They wrote out dramatic lyrics and went all out crazy. Lighten up a bit, everyone!”
Note: Released as artist name “Krystle Nicole Russin”
