Jump to content

I Am (Monrose album): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
copy edits
No edit summary
Line 9: Line 9:
| Length = 50:13
| Length = 50:13
| Label = Starwatch, [[Warner Music Group|Warner Music]]
| Label = Starwatch, [[Warner Music Group|Warner Music]]
| Producer = Carl Björsell, T. J. Cases, Cutfather, Oscar Gorres, JoelJoel, Jonas Jeberg, [[Jiant]], Roman Preylowski, Emanuel Rehwald, Snowflakers, [[Ryan Tedder|Ryan "Alias" Tedder]], Didrik Thott
| Producer = Carl Björsell, T. J. Cases, Cutfather, Oscar Gorres, JoelJoel, Edwin "Lil Eddie" Serrano, Jonas Jeberg, [[Jiant]], Roman Preylowski, Emanuel Rehwald, Snowflakers, [[Ryan Tedder|Ryan "Alias" Tedder]], Didrik Thott
| Reviews =
| Reviews =
* ''CDStarts'' {{rating|3|10}} [http://cdstarts.de/kritiken/98988-I-Am.html link]
* ''CDStarts'' {{rating|3|10}} [http://cdstarts.de/kritiken/98988-I-Am.html link]
Line 56: Line 56:
| length2 = 3:47
| length2 = 3:47
| title3 = Certified
| title3 = Certified
| writer3 = Mich Hansen, Jonas Jeberg, Edwin Serrano, Eritza Laues
| writer3 = Edwin Serrano, Eritza Laues
| extra3 = Jonas Jeberg, [[Cutfather]]
| extra3 = Jonas Jeberg, [[Cutfather]]
| length3 = 3:06
| length3 = 3:06
Line 108: Line 108:
| length15 = 3:17
| length15 = 3:17
| title16 = Step Aside <small>(iTunes Bonus Track)</small>
| title16 = Step Aside <small>(iTunes Bonus Track)</small>
| writer16 = Mich Hansen, Jonas Jeberg, Edwin Serrano, Eritza Laues
| writer16 = Edwin Serrano, Eritza Laues
| extra16 = Jonas Jeberg, Cutfather
| extra16 = Jonas Jeberg, Cutfather
| length16 = 3:07
| length16 = 3:07

Revision as of 09:01, 4 May 2011

Untitled

I Am is the third studio album by German pop trio Monrose, released by Starwatch Music and the Warner Music Group on 26 September 2008 (see 2008 in music) in German-speaking Europe and 29 September 2008 in Poland. The album features production by Jiant, Snowflakers, Guy Chambers, Edwin "Lil Eddie" Serrano, and OneRepublic frontman Ryan Tedder among others.[1][2]

Taking Monrose's work further into dance and electro music, the album scored a generally negative reception from music critics, with laut.de calling them "the Sugababes for discount store-fans."[3]

Production and songs

The songs on I Am were selected out of more than six hundred demo tracks.[4] The album's opening track, "Strike the Match", was penned by OneRepublic singer Ryan Tedder and Deborah Epstein. Selected out of several tracks in Tedder's repertoire, it was the first song confirmed to be appearing on the album.[2] Released as its leading single, the song reached the top ten of the German Singles Chart.[5] Second track "A Love Bizarre" is a cover version of the 1985 single by Sheila E. and Prince. Using the original instrumental as produced by Prince, the song has been described as all-time favorite by band member Guemmour.[6] "Certified" was written by longtime contributors Edwin "Lil' Eddie" Serrano and Jonas Jeberg, and has been described as "high-pitched, techincal, and scratching."[7]

"Why Not Us" by Guy Chambers has been categorized as an "emotional mid-tempo ballad [...] for the wintertime."[4] Originally planned to be released as the album's second single, it was released as the third.[4] In addition, the song served as a promotional track for the We Love Otto mail order campaign. "Stolen" features background vocals by Jamie Pineda from the successful pop music project Sweetbox after Jamie had recorded the song first. Fifth track "Going Out Tonight" incorporates elements of ragga and dancehall music, including rapped verses by all three band members,[4] while "You Can Look" combines dance-pop with rock music.[7] "Teach Me How the Jump" deals with death. The song was recorded in dedication to lost ones, including Guemmour's father, who died in 1992.[6]

Reviews

I Am received mainly negative reviews. LetMeEntertainYou entitled the album's tracks as "sorted out material from the collection of immoral books of Timbaland," calling it also "fiddling" and "sparsely innovative." Further criticisms stated that the girls' voices had been edited into digital cawings which get dislodged from the professional but overproduced music. Although CDStarts dismissed Monrose's original R'n'B/Pop-style, it deplored their attempt to go more into electro-pop as doing them no favors, and suggested that it could lead to a downfall from their established position in the German music scene.[7]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Strike The Match"Ryan Tedder, Deborah EpsteinRyan Tedder2:56
2."A Love Bizarre"Sheila Escovedo, Prince Rogers NelsonJiant, Snowflakers3:47
3."Certified"Edwin Serrano, Eritza LauesJonas Jeberg, Cutfather3:06
4."Why Not Us"Guy Chambers, Alexis StrumGuy Chambers, Pete Kirtley3:29
5."Going Out Tonight"Pete Kirtley, Obi MhonderaJiant2:50
6."You Can Look"Nermin Harambasic, Anne Judith Wik, Ronny Svendsen, Robin JenssenRonny Svendsen, Nermin Harambasic3:25
7."Tip Toe"C. Costi, C. Ryden, H. Lira, I.-P. Lira, T. GustafssonJiant2:59
8."Teach Me How To Jump"David Eriksen, Virginia McGrailJiant, Snowflakers3:31
9."Stolen"Carl Björsell, Edward Steve Louis, Didrik ThottCarl Björsell, Didrik Thott3:19
10."Electricity"Daniel Volpe, Thomas LippRoman Preylowski, Emanuel Rehwald, Jiant2:56
11."Hit 'N' Run"JoelJoel, The Provider, Charlie MasonJoelJoel, Oscar Gorres3:14
12."No Never"Rob Divas, Shelly PooleJiant, Snowflakers3:45
13."Stained"Andreas Romdhane, Josef Larossi, Linda Kiraly, Savan KotechaJiant, Snowflakers3:37
14."What They Want"Alex Cartana, Pete Martin, Jasmine BairdJiant, Snowflakers3:53
15."Don't Touch The Fader"Karen Poole, Mathias Wollo, Jonas QuantJiant, Snowflakers3:17
16."Step Aside (iTunes Bonus Track)"Edwin Serrano, Eritza LauesJonas Jeberg, Cutfather3:07

Release history

Country Date
Germany September 26, 2008
Poland September 29, 2008

Charts

Chart (2008) Peak
position
Certifications
Austrian Albums Chart[5] 20 -
European Top 100 Albums 35 -
German Albums Chart[5] 9
Swiss Albums Chart[5] 14 -

References

  1. ^ "Diary entry". Official fanclub. Retrieved 2008-03-10.
  2. ^ a b "Ryan Tedder: Konkurrenz für Top-Produzent Timbaland?". Bild-Zeitung. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
  3. ^ Artur Schulz. "I Am review". laut.de. Retrieved 2008-10-18.
  4. ^ a b c d Kraus, Walter (2008-09-22). "Interview mit Monrose-Chanteuse Bahar". Beatblogger. Retrieved 2008-11-15.
  5. ^ a b c d "'Strike the Match' - song performance". A-Charts. Retrieved 2008-06-22. Cite error: The named reference "ac" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  6. ^ a b "Unser Team ist einfach perfekt!". Woodz. 2008-10-01. Retrieved 2008-11-28.
  7. ^ a b c Ranner, Albert (2008-10-01). "I Am review". CDStars. Retrieved 2008-11-20.