yourmusic.com
Already a subscriber? Log In
Search
For Browse Learn More
Subscribe Now
Browse Music
Rock & Pop
R&B & Hip-Hop
Country
Blues
Jazz
Classical
Latin
Christian
Soundtracks
Collections
Amy Winehouse
Back To Black
Amy Winehouse:  Back To Black Tell a Friend about this album

$6.99
AMG Top Pick Listen Parental Advisory
Subscribe Now
Album Review

Released: 2007
Label: Republic
Selection #: 171071
UK’s R&B sensation releases her attention-grabbing soph set. Rehab, You Know I’m No Good (w/Ghostface Killah), Love Is A Losing Game, Wake Up Alone, etc.
Listen RM WM
1 Rehab
2 You Know I'm No Good
3 Me & Mr. Jones
4 Just Friends
5 Back to Black
6 Love Is a Losing Game
7 Tears Dry on Their Own
8 Wake Up Alone
9 Some Unholy War
10 He Can Only Hold Her
11 You Know I'm No Good
  
Download Player:    Real Media Real Media    Windows Media Windows Media
Album Review

The story of "Back to Black" is one in which celebrity and the potential of commercial success threaten to ruin Amy Winehouse, since the same insouciance and playfulness that made her sound so special when she debuted could easily have been whitewashed right out of existence for this breakout record. (That fact may help to explain why fans were so scared by press allegations that Winehouse had deliberately lost weight in order to present a slimmer appearance.) Although "Back to Black" does see her deserting jazz and wholly embracing contemporary R&B, all the best parts of her musical character emerge intact, and actually, are all the better for the transformation from jazz vocalist to soul siren. With producer Salaam Remi returning from "Frank", plus the welcome addition of Mark Ronson (fresh off successes producing for Christina Aguilera and Robbie Williams), "Back to Black" has a similar sound to "Frank" but much more flair and spark to it. Winehouse was inspired by girl group soul of the '60s, and fortunately Ronson and Remi are two of the most facile and organic R&B producers active. (They certainly know how to evoke the era too; Remi's "Tears Dry On Their Own" is a sparkling homage to the Motown chestnut "Ain'T No Mountain High Enough," and Ronson summons a host of Brill Building touchstones on his tracks.) As before, Winehouse writes all of the songs from her experiences, most of which involve the occasionally riotous and often bittersweet vagaries of love. Also in similar fashion to "Frank", her eye for details and her way of relating them are delightful. She states her case against "Rehab" on the knockout first single with some great lines: "They tried to make me go to rehab I won't go go go, I'd rather be at home with Ray" [Charles, that is]. As often as not, though, the songs on "Back to Black" are universal, songs that anyone, even Joss Stone, could take to the top of the charts, such as "Love Is A Losing Game" or the title song ("We only said good bye with words, I died a hundred times/ You go back to her, and I go back to black"). ~ John Bush, All Music Guide

Back To Top
About This Artist
Biography


Other albums by: Amy Winehouse
Amy Winehouse:  Frank Listen Parental Advisory Amy Winehouse
Frank

$6.99

Subscribe Now
more
Related Artists
Mary J. Blige
Billie Holiday
Cassandra Wilson
Erykah Badu
Lauryn Hill
Missy Elliott
Christina Aguilera
Macy Gray
Nelly Furtado
Norah Jones
Billie Holiday & Lester Young
Joss Stone
Jamie Cullum
Nikka Costa
Lily Allen


more

Any reproduction, publication, further distribution, or public exhibition of materials provided at this site, in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited.
©2006 All Media Guide, LLC
Portions of content provided by All Music Guide®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC