Over My Heart
Over My Heart is the seventh and final studio album by American singer Laura Branigan. Released in August 1993, it was Branigan's most personal album and saw her again try her hand at producing, alongside successful producer Phil Ramone. While the Gloria Estefan-penned "Love Your Girl" was aimed for the clubs that made her famous, the album was ballad-heavy, including the opener "How Can I Help You To Say Goodbye"; the Spanish-language "Mujer Contra Mujer"; "Mangwane (The Wedding Song)" (taught to her by her friend Stevie Godson, who was also the executive producer on the track), sung in Sotho, a South African language, and recorded there with the Mmabana Children's Choir; and several of her own compositions, "Didn't We Almost Win It All" and "Over You". Critical receptionBillboard Magazine praised the album in their review, writing "acclaimed singer applies her graceful alto to a collection of first-rate originals plus songs written for her by the likes of Gloria Estefan, Michael Bolton, and Roxette's Per Gessle. Title track single is geared for AC play with potential pop crossover. The same is true of the touching opener "How Can I Help You Say Goodbye," Gessle's "The Sweet Hello, The Sad Goodbye," and Branigan's own "Didn't We Almost Win It All."[3] Chuck Eddy from Entertainment Weekly wrote, "Branigan's 1982 hit, 'Gloria', took disco to operatic extremes, and her '84 'Self Control' was basically Joy Division's Goth-punk classic, 'She's Lost Control', made more lurid. Nowadays, Branigan is beating Celine Dion at Dion's own game, dancing between a loudly sung boom and a lonely housewife gloom. On Over My Heart, she climbs out on a new limb, belting out lyrics in Spanish and a South African dialect. But she's still rending hearts, especially when she remembers the day her family moved away from her best friend in a '59 station wagon."[2] Allmusic noted that "at the age of 36, Laura Branigan felt it was time to sing more about heartache and the pains of failing relationships than to give her music the same kind of pop amiability found on past hits like "Self Control" and "Gloria." But the real problem with Over My Heart is that each and every track gets doused with an overabundance of thirty-something insipidness and routine-sounding lyrical drivel...The one thing that Branigan does have going for her is her voice, which sounds fresh and crisp despite her clichéd material."[4] "Didn't We Almost Win It All""Didn't We Almost Win It All" was released as the first single from the album. Larry Flick from Billboard described the song as "a sweeping power-ballad" from Branigan's "delicious (but sadly underrated) Over My Heart album." He added, "Branigan's distinct, crystal-clear voice is warmly familiar, running through a gamut of theatrical emotions as only she can. The arrangement is packed with grandiose piano rushes, nimble guitar riffs, and pounds of faux-strings. Like sinfully tasty candy for the brain."[5] Track listing
Personnel
Production
Charts
References
|