Robert Palmer - Don't Explain
Facts
| Artist(s) | Robert Palmer |
| Studio | Disky Records |
| Release Date | February 22, 2001 |
| UPC Code | 766483239046 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Oct 11 8:48 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 2 to 3 weeks, Import |
About Robert Palmer - Don't Explain
Robert Palmer's second EMI album, originally released in 1990, features 18 tracks including a cover of Dylan's 'I'll Be Your Baby Tonight'. Disky. Album Description
Tracks
- Your Mother Should Have Told You
- Light-Years
- You Can't Get Enough of a Good Thing
- Dreams to Remember
- You're Amazing
- Mess Around
- Happiness
- History
- I'll Be Your Baby Tonight
- Housework
- Mercy Mercy Me/I Want You
- Don't Explain
- Aeroplane
- People Will Say We're in Love
- Not a Word
- Top 40
- You're So Desirable
- You're My Thrill
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User Reviews
Average user review:| One of my all time favorites! |
| Great songs, many styles |
Don't Explain encompasses an impressive variety of styles, all pulled off with aplomb by the great blue-eyed soul artist. There are hard rock numbers like You're Amazing, Light Years and You Can't Get Enough plus a lovely, melodious rock ballad: Dreams To Remember.
The rest of the songs charm the listener in a lighter vein, like the funky Prince-like Mess Around, the clever and catchy History with its chugging chorus and the lilting UB40-backed I'll Be Your Baby Tonight. The glittering prize however, is the stunning Housework, an infectious calypso shaker that makes you want to dance for joy; very rhythmic and uplifting ditty.
The cover versions include Marvin Gaye's Mercy Mercy Me leading into I Want You, Billie Holiday's smoky Don't Explain with mellifluous phrasing by Mr Smooth, and Top 40, a jazzy excursion. This impressive album bows out with two archaic ballads from a bygone era. Don't Explain showcases the versatility and the talent of this unique British singer who is no longer with us.
April 15, 2006
| To hear good music these days you have to go back in time |
I havent heard a good ALBUM (not song, a WHOLE album) that i've enjoyed from start to finish without feeling a happy trigger finger heading towards the skip button. In this case, i'm addicted to the album. I havent skipped a track yet... it's so good!
Kicking off with great hard rock, 80's metal, groove's, rockin' tunes you can either dance to or head bang to! then the other half of the album is love songs, cabret and a Frank Sinatra kind of feel. Rock and Romance... defnitly an odd combination, but if anyone could pull it off it's Robbie Palmer.
Robert Palmer is truely one of the all time great rock n roll performers and I think i will be missing him more with each album I hear of his from now on. A true rock n roll legend he was, is and always will be.
R.I.P, Mr Palmer. Forever we will remember you through the great music you left us with. July 22, 2005
| Underappreciated Set Has Gems For Palmer Fans |
The last third of this set sees the singer in full romance mode, alternating between inspired original compositions such as "Aeroplane" and "Not A Word" and Palmer's own take of classic bits such as "You're So Desirable". The first two feature excellent string arrangements and show Palmer capable of conveying emotion vocally without being over the top while the latter plays to his vocal strengths with a more happy lyric and upbeat tempo. The title track is a Bille Holiday standard where Palmer's subtle, understated vocals strongly convey the emotions of longing and pain expressed in the lyrics. In between it all is a unique medley of 2 Marvin Gaye hits, "Mercy Mercy Me" and "I Want You", where the singer literally creates a whole new song, using the pain and anguish over a world going bad from Gaye's powerful environmental ode as the bridge into a lyrical pleading for a chance at romance from Gaye's second number. Sticking with an arrangement culled largely from the first song, the lyrics provide near perfect segue and Palmer raises the bar with some of his most powerful vocalizing in the song's second half. It's little wonder this song was a major hit single in both the US and UK, arguably the best known song in this collection. Overall, there are a good 12-14 songs in this set that would make a really good Robert Palmer record, the problem here isn't that there isn't enough, it's that there is a bit too much. Still a good buy, with a lot of interesting material alongside some enjoyable guitar driven rock songs. In fact, Palmer recruits Steve Stevens from Billy Idol's band to assist on some of the more edgy material, an excellent choice. Robert Palmer fans will definately enjoy. November 22, 2003
| More easy listening than rock |
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