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Neptune City (album)

Neptune City
Nicole atkins-neptune city-(2007)-front.jpg
Studio album by Nicole Atkins
Released October 30, 2007 (2007-10-30)
Recorded September, November 2006
Varispeed Studios, Kalgerup, Sweden
Gula Studion, Malmö, Sweden
Genre Chamber pop,country pop
Label Red Ink/Columbia
Producer Tore Johansson
Nicole Atkins chronology
Neptune City
(2007)
Mondo Amore
(2011)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AbsolutePunk (84%)
Allmusic 4.5/5 stars
BBC Music (positive)
The Cornell Daily Sun (positive)
Entertainment Weekly (B+)
Music Emissions 4.5/5 stars
The New Zealand Herald 4/5 stars
PopMatters 8/10 stars
Spin (6/10)
Under the Radar (8.5/10)

Neptune City is an album by Nicole Atkins, released in the U.S. on October 30, 2007 by Columbia Records. The album reached No. 6 on Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart.

Prior to the album's release, Atkins found herself at a bar her family frequented in Neptune City, New Jersey called Bilow's, thinking about what she would title her album. She pondered aloud naming the album Neptune City, almost as a counterbalance to Greetings from Asbury Park, N.J., with encouragement from the bar's patrons. "And I figured Neptune City, too, it seems so ominous," she told the Village Voice. "It sounds like very, you know, aquatic and mysterious." Though several publications have suggested the album's title refers directly to her hometown, the real life Neptune City is a distinct municipality just to the east of Atkins' native Neptune, New Jersey.

Neptune City was generally well received by most music critics. Katherine Fulton of Allmusic noticed that "Atkins shows on this album that she has both the capability and potential" and praised the "lush arrangements on Neptune City, which [...] showcase the depth, range, and versatility of Atkins' alto voice, not to mention her songwriting prowess". Chris Jones of BBC Music wrote that Atkins "delivers glorious, over-the-top twang-drenched ballads that both romanticise her native New Jersey and yet still throw in a tough, dark heart of country noir" and described the album as "something akin to country, but also something weirdly post-modern", while praising its production and vocals. Susan Frances of AbsolutePunk wrote that "the whole album is tooled with melodic patterned frescos combining orchestral fields with pop/rock elements" and added that it "does justice to the real Neptune City". Mikael Wood from Entertainment Weekly described it as "heartbreak nearly at its finest — and most cosmopolitan" while Joanna Hunkin of The New Zealand Herald compared it to "an intricate oil painting" and called it "a collection of curiosities, revealing a new intrigue with every listen".


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