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'''''Two Eyes''''' is the third studio album by the American singer/songwriter [[Brenda Russell]], released in 1983 on [[Warner Bros. Records]].<ref>{{cite work|title=Brenda Russell: Two Eyes|date=May 1983|publisher=[[Warner Bros. Records]]}}</ref> The album got to No. 16 on the [[Blues & Soul]] Top UK Soul Albums chart.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.45worlds.com/magazine/issue/blues-soul-384|title=Brenda Russell: Two Eyes|date=June 28, 1983|publisher=[[Blues & Soul]]|website=45worlds.com}}</ref>
'''''Two Eyes''''' is the third studio album by the American singer/songwriter [[Brenda Russell]], released in 1983 on [[Warner Bros. Records]].<ref>{{cite work|title=Brenda Russell: Two Eyes|date=May 1983|publisher=[[Warner Bros. Records]]}}</ref> The album got to No. 16 on the [[Blues & Soul]] Top UK Soul Albums chart.<ref name=B&S>{{cite web|url=http://www.45worlds.com/magazine/issue/blues-soul-384|title=Brenda Russell: Two Eyes|date=June 28, 1983|publisher=[[Blues & Soul]]|website=45worlds.com}}</ref>


==Album History==
==Album History==

Revision as of 05:39, 25 October 2019

Template:Other uses2

Two Eyes
Studio album by
ReleasedMay 1983
RecordedJuly - December 1982,[1] Los Angeles: Sound Labs, Lion Share Studios, Sunset Sound
Genre
Length34:09
LabelWarner Bros.
ProducerTommy LiPuma
Brenda Russell chronology
Love Life
(1981)
Two Eyes
(1983)
Get Here
(1988)

Two Eyes is the third studio album by the American singer/songwriter Brenda Russell, released in 1983 on Warner Bros. Records.[2] The album got to No. 16 on the Blues & Soul Top UK Soul Albums chart.[3]

Album History

The track "Hello People" was co-written and performed with Michael McDonald, whereas the track "Look Down, Young Soldier" featured a whole chorus of star names including Rita Coolidge, Pattie Brooks, Randy Crawford, Christopher Cross, James Ingram, Patrice Rushen, Joe Esposito, Leon Ware, and Al Jarreau (who was the subject of the track "Jarreau" that Russell had written for the album).

Two Eyes was Russell's first and only album with Warner Bros. Records, whom she signed with after leaving A&M Records (the label that had released her first two solo albums). However, despite the impressive list of personnel, the album was not a commercial success and Russell's contract with Warner Bros. came to an end. Russell would return to A&M a few years later for her next album.

In 1990, singer Lalah Hathaway covered the song "It's Something" under the title "Somethin'" on her self-titled debut album. Later in 2013 Lalah Hathaway with Snarky Puppy did another rendition of the song for the album 'Family Dinner - Volume 1', which on January 26, 2014, won a Grammy Award in the "Best R&B Performance" category. [4]

Track listing

  1. "I Want Love To Find Me" (Brenda Russell, Bill LaBounty) – 3:02
  2. "It's Something" (Brenda Russell, David Foster) – 3:31
  3. "Hello People" (Brenda Russell, Michael McDonald) – 3:24
  4. "Two Eyes" (Brenda Russell) – 3:16
  5. "Stay Close" (Brenda Russell, Don Grusin) – 4:25
  6. "Jarreau" (Brenda Russell) – 3:13
  7. "New York Bars" (Brenda Russell) – 4:04
  8. "I'll See You Again" (Brenda Russell) – 4:20
  9. "Look Down, Young Soldier" (Brenda Russell) – 4:40

Personnel

Production

  • Producer: Tommy LiPuma
  • Executive Producers: David Nathan and Paul Tarnopol
  • Recording and Mix: Al Schmitt
  • Creative Director: Rich Kamerman

Charts

Chart (1983) Peak
position
UK Blues & Soul Top UK Soul Albums[3] 16

References

  1. ^ Linear notes of 2002 CD reissue
  2. ^ Brenda Russell: Two Eyes. Warner Bros. Records. May 1983.
  3. ^ a b "Brenda Russell: Two Eyes". 45worlds.com. Blues & Soul. June 28, 1983.
  4. ^ "Grammy Awards". Grammy.com. Retrieved 2013-12-07.