Love Goes On (Paulette Carlson album)

Love Goes On is the debut album by American country music singer Paulette Carlson, who until 1991 was the lead singer of the band Highway 101. Her first solo album, it produced the singles "I'll Start with You" and "Not with My Heart You Don't," which respectively reached numbers 21 and 68 on the Hot Country Songs charts.[1] A third single, "The Chain Just Broke," failed to chart.

Love Goes On
Studio album by
Released1991
GenreCountry
Length31:13
LabelCapitol
ProducerJimmy Bowen
Paulette Carlson
Paulette Carlson chronology
Love Goes On
(1991)
Christmas Is For You
(1993)

Critical reception

Michael McCall of Allmusic rated the album four stars out of five, saying that she showed a similar musical personality to her work in Highway 101, but adding that the production was too slick.[2] Alanna Nash of Entertainment Weekly gave the album a "C", saying that "Without a spirited band behind her[…]Carlson and her hyper-quavering soprano seem oddly detached from the material, which, with the exception of the bluesy The Chain Just Broke, seems merely bland and undistinguished country-pop."[3]

Track listing

  1. "I'll Start with You" (Paulette Carlson, Tom Shapiro, Chris Waters) — 3:12
  2. "Not with My Heart You Don't" (Carlson, Jeff Pennig, Mike Noble) — 2:56
  3. "Someone I Used to Know" (Carlson, Shapiro, Waters) — 3:24
  4. "Love Is Never Wrong" (Paul Overstreet, Don Schlitz) — 3:13
  5. "Why Should I?" (Shapiro, Chuck Jones) — 3:05
  6. "The Chain Just Broke" (Monty Powell, Noble) — 3:16
  7. "It's Too Bad" (Carlson, Shapiro, Waters) — 3:03
  8. "Where Ya Comin' From" (Carlson, Shapiro, Waters) — 2:45
  9. "Falling in Love for a Lifetime" (Carlson, Jerry Careaga) — 2:55
  10. "Love Goes On" (Carlson, Shapiro, Waters) — 3:24

Personnel

gollark: *Or* Marmite!
gollark: Yes, this is also not ideal.
gollark: They didn't have swivel chairs then, among other things.
gollark: I would *not* like 500 BC.
gollark: Another issue is that the requirement that the human running everything not have to look far to place the next rock (→ cellular automaton is needed, as is said in the image) means there's even more indirection for useful computing, so you need even more rocks and time!

References

  1. Whitburn, Joel (2008). Hot Country Songs 1944 to 2008. Record Research, Inc. p. 79. ISBN 0-89820-177-2.
  2. McCall, Michael. "Love Goes On review". Allmusic. Retrieved 16 September 2010.
  3. Nash, Alanna (22 November 1991). "Love Goes On review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved 4 January 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.