*** Welcome to piglix ***

Back to Now

Back to Now
BackToNow.jpg
Studio album by Labelle
Released October 21, 2008
April 20, 2009 (UK)
Genre R&B, pop, rock
Length 49:22
Label Verve, Universal
Producer Lenny Kravitz, Wyclef Jean, Gamble & Huff
Labelle chronology
Chameleon
(1976)
Back to Now
(2008)
Singles from Back to Now
  1. "Roll Out"
    Released: November 18, 2008
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
About.com 3/5 stars
Allmusic 3/5 stars
BBC Music favorable
Baltimore Sun 3/5 stars
Entertainment Weekly B+
The Miami Herald 3/5 stars
Record Collector 4/5 stars
Robert Christgau (choice cut)
The Village Voice favorable
Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews 3.5/5 stars

Back to Now is the seventh and latest studio album by American R&B female group Labelle, released on October 21, 2008. The album is the group's first in over thirty years though they had sung on songs together on occasion.

Labelle member Nona Hendryx explained the album's title to noted R&B writer Pete Lewis of Blues & Soul: "It basically stemmed from two of the songs on this album being songs I'd specifically written for what would have been the next Labelle album back in 1977. So the title 'Back To Now" is really signifiying that this record represents us really getting back to where we were. It's basically a continuation from where we stopped off."

The first single is "Roll Out", which features and is produced by Wyclef Jean which had the three Labelle members Patti LaBelle, Nona Hendryx and Sarah Dash singing in autotune.

The album is also notable for the modest R&B charted ballad, "Superlover". Except for "The Truth Will Set You Free", originally recorded by Mother's Finest, in which Hendryx sings the lead over Lenny Kravitz's guitar and LaBelle's ad-libs in soprano and "System", which LaBelle, Hendryx and Dash each take a prominent lead vocal, the album is led as always by LaBelle, who gives a powerful vocal in the socially conscious "Tears for the World", a Hendryx composition.

The album is also notable for their tribute to civil rights activist Rosa Parks with "Dear Rosa" and also includes their 1971 rendition of the Cole Porter standard, "Miss Otis Regrets", which was originally recorded for sessions of their Warner debut, Labelle, but was cut from the album's final selection of tracks.


...
Wikipedia

...