Bring It Back (McAlmont & Butler album)

Bring It Back is the second album by rock/soul duo McAlmont & Butler, released in 2002 following the reunion of the duo who had split up in 1995.

Bring It Back
Studio album by
Released27 August 2002
GenreIndie rock, soul
LabelEMI
ProducerBernard Butler
McAlmont & Butler chronology
The Sound Of... McAlmont & Butler
(1995)
Bring It Back
(2002)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Drowned in Sound8/10[2]
entertainment.ie
The Guardian[3]
Hot Press9/12[4]
The Independent(favourable)[5]
NME6/10[6]
No Ripcord7/10[7]
The Scotsman[8]
Stylus MagazineB+[9]

Track listing

All songs written by David McAlmont and Bernard Butler.

  1. "Theme from 'McAlmont and Butler'" – 5:14
  2. "Falling" – 4:13
  3. "Different Strokes" – 4:17
  4. "Can We Make It" – 3:32
  5. "Blue" – 4:52
  6. "Bring It Back" – 4:06
  7. "Where R U Now?" – 4:04
  8. "Sunny Boy" – 3:42
  9. "Make it Right" – 4:04
  10. "Beat" – 5:58

Personnel

  • David Arnold – Conductor, String Arrangements
  • Gini Ball – String Arrangements
  • Brilliant Strings – Strings
  • Jack Brockbank – Assistant
  • Bernard Butler – Producer, Engineer, String Arrangements
  • Dominic Glover – Saxophone
  • Jim Hunt – Horn, Baritone saxophone
  • Seb Lewsley – Engineer
  • Peter Lockett – Percussion
  • Billy McGee – Conductor, String Arrangements
  • Makoto Sakamoto – Drums
  • Nick Terry – Engineer, Mixdown Engineer
  • Felix Tod – Engineer
  • Kevin Westenberg – Photography
  • Steve White – Drums
  • Nick Woolage – Engineer, Mixdown Engineer

UK Singles Charting

  • Falling (2002, number 23)
  • Bring It Back (2002)
gollark: Not really, you can defend fine against the actually-realistic-and-problematic-for-you issues.
gollark: It's not ideal.
gollark: And AMD has the platform security processor.
gollark: I mean, all recent Intel CPUs have the Intel Management Engine, i.e. a mini-CPU with full access to everything running unfathomable code.
gollark: At some point you probably have to decide that some issues aren't really realistic or useful to consider, such as "what if there are significant backdoors in every consumer x86 CPU".

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.