What About Regret, stylized as (What About Regret), is an album by the American musician Kate Jacobs, released in 1995.[2][3] Jacobs promoted the album with two tours, one with a full band and one with just a bass player.[4]
What About Regret | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1995 | |||
Genre | Folk, pop | |||
Label | Bar/None Records[1] | |||
Producer | Kate Jacobs, Dave Schramm, James MacMillan, Charlie Shaw, Gary Arnold | |||
Kate Jacobs chronology | ||||
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After an editor at Hyperion Books heard Jacobs perform "A Sister" on the radio, the song was adapted for an illustrated children's book.[5]
The album was produced by Jacobs, Dave Schramm, James MacMillan, Charlie Shaw, and Gary Arnold.[6] As on Jacobs's first album, Schramm played guitar and many other instruments.[7]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Indianapolis Star | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
MusicHound Folk: The Essential Album Guide | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Stereo Review considered that "while there's great warmth in Jacobs's songs, and a nice homemade quality, many of her offerings have an off-putting vagueness and an eccentricity-for-eccentricity's-sake quality about them."[11] The Indianapolis Star opined that "Jacobs' voice is light and lilting, but unwavering ... Musically, she's akin to Nanci Griffith and Iris DeMent, but she's no clone."[9] The Philadelphia Inquirer determined that Schramm "decorates each tune beautifully with whatever acoustic or electric touches the songs demand."[12]
The Chicago Tribune concluded that the "brilliant lyrics continue to detonate long after these lovely, sometimes meandering, folk-pop tunes have finished."[13] Trouser Press wrote: "A moderately demanding emotional experience, (What About Regret) rewards careful listening with details and empathy, like a series of personal letters from close friends."[14] The Chicago Reader thought that "Jacobs sings her airy country-tinged folk rock with a slippery warble, sliding over clearly defined melodies with a palpable shyness."[15]
Will Hermes, in City Pages, listed the album as his fifth favorite of 1995, writing that "of all the country-rock sets this year, Jacobs's moved me the most ... In a word, it was her stories—tales not of vague ennui, but of people I knew intimately"; The Star-Ledger also listed What About Regret among 1995's best albums.[16][17] MusicHound Folk: The Essential Album Guide praised "some of the richest, most complex songs written during the [1990s]."[10]
No. | Title | Length |
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1. | "George Says" | |
2. | "See the Moon" | |
3. | "Be Brave" | |
4. | "No Question" | |
5. | "My Old Haunts" | |
6. | "Oh Vagabond" | |
7. | "Indiana" | |
8. | "Love Comes and Goes" | |
9. | "In the Country" | |
10. | "3 Years in Nebraska" | |
11. | "Don't Watch Me Sleep" | |
12. | "A Sister" | |
13. | "Made My Bed" |