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Friends Can Be Lovers is the twenty-ninth studio album by American singer Dionne Warwick. Her tenth album for Arista Records, it was released on January 20, 1993 in the United States. Warwick garthered material from songwriters and producers such as Barry J. Eastmond, Harvey Mason, Siedah Garrett, Dianne Warren, and Blue Zone lead singer Lisa Stansfield. The album, which Warwick described as "a labor love" and true "family affair," also saw her collaborating with her son David Elliot and cousin Whitney Houston for the first time as well as reuniting with former contributors Burt Bacharach and Hal David on the song "Sunny Weather Love" after more than two decades.[1]

Friends Can Be Lovers
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 20, 1993
Length46:40
LabelArista
Producer
  • Burt Bacharach
  • Ian Devaney
  • Barry J. Eastmond
  • David Elliott
  • Masaki Kubo
  • Harvey Mason
  • Andy Morris
  • Dionne Warwick
Dionne Warwick chronology
Hidden Gems: The Best of Dionne Warwick, Vol. 2
(1992)
Friends Can Be Lovers
(1993)
Aquarela do Brasil
(1994)
Singles from Friends Can Be Lovers
  1. "Sunny Weather Lover"
    Released: 1993
  2. "Where My Lips Have Been"
    Released: 1993
  3. "Friends Can Be Lovers"
    Released: 1993

The album was released to positive reception from music critics, some of which were her new Bacharach–David record but applauded Warwick's vocals, its production and the overall direction of the album. Commercially, though, Friends Can Be Lovers was a considerable decline from her previous efforts with Arista, becoming her first album since 1977 to not chart on the US Billboard 200 and reaching number 82 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums only. Of all three singles that were released from the album, only "Where My Lips Have Been" was able to chart, peaking at number 95 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. Disappointed by its performance, Warwick later expressed her dislike of the album itself.


Background


In 1990, Warwick released Dionne Warwick Sings Cole Porter, a tribute album consisting of standards by American songwriter Cole Porter.[2] For her next project, her tenth regular album for Arista Records, Warwick stuck to her regular formula of changing most collaborators from album to album.[1] In hopes of providing current material without changing Warwick's trademark sound, Arista Records head Clive Davis consulted Barry J. Eastmond to produced the majority of the album.[1] With new jack swing and hip hop soul dominating the charts then, Eastmond, along with Warwick's oldest son David Elliott, envisioned to "throw a little hop hop" into what they were planning to record with the singer.[1]

Friends Can Be Lovers marked Warwick's first collaboration with both Elliott and her cousin, singer Whitney Houston, who contributed vocals to the duet song "Love Will Find a Way."[1] Davis also arranged for Warwick to record with English singer Lisa Stansfield, who co-wrote the album's title track along with her former band mates from Blue Zone.[1] Warwick herself reached out to composer Burt Bacharach and his former lyricst Hal David to reunite with her on the record.[1] Bacharach had discovered Warwick in 1961 and, along with David, penned most of her hit singles until 1972 when the duo decided that they would discontinue writing material together.[1] "Sunny Weather Love" marked their first collaboration in twenty years.[3] Frequent collaborator Luther Vandross served as a backing vocalist on the Sting cover "Fragile."[1]


Critical reception


Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[4]
Encyclopedia of Popular Music[5]
Entertainment WeeklyB[6]
Rolling Stone Album Guide[7]
USA Today[8]

Friends Can Be Lovers was released to positive reception from music critics.[4] Bil Carpenter from Allmusic called Friends Can Be Lovers "certainly one of her best-produced, best-sung and well-packaged albums since joining the Arista roster." He found that "Here lies the pleasant balance between Dionnesque pop anthems ("Age of Miracles" and "I Sing at Dawn"), ballads (Sting's "Fragile" and a duet with Whitney Houston on "Love Will Find a Way"), down-right funk on "Much Too Much" and shameless lust on "Where My Lips Have Been"."[4] Janine McAdams from Billboard remarked that fans of the singer may find the album "a pleasant surprise" and complimented Warwick for her selection of collaborators on it, writing: "Warwick has found the right package of contemporary songs to set off her throaty purr."[9]

Her colleague, Billboard writer Paul Verna, named Friends Can Be Lovers "a sterling set of R&B-spiced pop ballads" and cited single "Sunny Weather Love," Warwick's duet with Houston and Stansfied's title track as highlights on the album. He, though, found that the remainder of the album was "equally potent."[10] Entertainment Weekly's Amy Linden was unimpressed by "Sunny Weather Love," but liked Stansfield's contributions to the album "whose sexy, grown-up grooves fit Dionne Warwick’s burnt-umber pop stylings like a glove on Friends Can Be Lovers."[6] In a positive review, The Indianapolis Star wrote that "the combination of covers and new material, with greatly varied influences, all distills into comfortable, vintage Dionne Warwick. Warwick is able particularly with the Bacharach–David revisitation to bring us music that seems instantly familiar and so easy to listen to."[11]


Commercial performance


The album debuted and peaked at number 84 on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums in the week ending February 13, 1993.[12] This marked Warwick's lowest peak for a regular studio album with all-original material since Love at First Sight (1977), her final album with Warner Bros. Records.[12] Friends Can Be Lovers failed to chart elsewhere, also becoming her first album in 16 years to miss the US Billboard 200.[12] In her 2011 autobiography My Life, As I See It, Warwick revelead that she "hated this project" and "did not feel the songs or production met the standards [she] was accustomed to."[13] Particularly critical with the song Where My Lips Have Been, Warwick wrote that "it was a lot – not a little – outside of the messages I was known to deliver lyrically, and I think it tested me to the brink."[13]


Track listing


No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Sunny Weather Love"
  • Barry J. Eastmond
  • Bacharach
4:09
2."Age of Miracles"
Eastmond4:41
3."Where My Lips Have Been"
  • Robert Charles Burns
  • Sandy Knox
  • Don Huber
Eastmond4:35
4."Friends Can Be Lovers"
  • Devaney
  • Morris
5:28
5."Love Will Find a Way" (duet with Whitney Houston)
  • David L. Elliott
  • Terry Steele
  • Elliott
  • Steele[A]
4:56
6."Much Too Much"Diane Warren
  • Devaney
  • Morris
4:29
7."Til the End of Time"
  • Elliott
  • Eastmond
  • Steele
  • Eastmond
  • Vincent Herbert[B]
5:11
8."The Woman That I Am"Eastmond4:35
9."Fragile"Sting
  • Harvey Mason
  • Dionne Warwick
4:09
10."I Sing at Dawn"
  • Tokiko Iwatani
  • Warwick
  • Taku Izumi
  • Masaki Kubo
  • Joe Kloess[A]
  • Rob Shrock[A]
4:27
Déjà Vu – The Arista Recordings (2020) bonus tracks[14]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
11."A True Love" (featuring Sacha Distel)
  • Warwick
  • Distel
  • Pierre Grosz
Grosz3:18
12."Who's Counting Heartaches" (duet with Johnny Mathis)Sergio Mendes4:19
13."I Don't Need Another Love" (with The Spinners)
  • Michael Sutton
  • Brenda Sutton
Nick Martinelli4:09

Notes


Personnel and credits


Musicians

Production


Charts


Chart (1993) Peak
position
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[12] 84

References


  1. Waldron, Clarance (March 29, 1993). "Dionne Warwick Celebrates 30th Year in Music With Sizzling New Album". Jet. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  2. "People Are Talking About..." Jet. Johnson Publishing Company. July 23, 1990. p. 54. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  3. Kohlhaase, Bill (January 29, 1993). "That's What Friends Are For". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved April 19, 2021.
  4. Carpenter, Bil. "Friends Can Be Lovers". AllMusic. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
  5. Larkin, Colin (2011). "Mariah Carey". Encyclopedia of Popular Music (5th ed.). Omnibus Press. ISBN 978-0857125958.
  6. Linden, Amy (March 5, 1993). "Friends Can Be Lovers Review". Entertainment Weekly. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  7. Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian David (2004). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide. Rolling Stone Album Guide. p. 860. ISBN 9780743201698. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  8. Reviews: Friends Can Be Lovers. USA Today. March 5, 1993. p. 23.
  9. McAdams, Janine (March 6, 1993). "Levert Yearns For The 'Good Ol Days'". Billboard. p. 22. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  10. Verna, Paul (February 6, 1993). "Album Reviews". Billboard. p. 53. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  11. McAdams, Janine (February 26, 1993). "Levert Yearns For The 'Good Ol Days'". Billboard. p. 22. Retrieved April 18, 2021.
  12. "Dionne Warwick Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved July 29, 2020.
  13. Warwick, Dionne; Freeman Wooley, David (2011). My Life, as I See It – An Autobiography. Atria Books. ISBN 978-1439171356.
  14. "Dionne Warwick: Déjà Vu – The Arista Recordings (1979–1994), 12CD Boxset". cherryred.co.uk. Retrieved April 18, 2021.



На других языках


- [en] Friends Can Be Lovers

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Friends Can Be Lovers — двадцать восьмой студийный альбом американской певицы Дайон Уорвик, выпущенный в 1993 году на лейбле Arista Records. Продюсером альбома стал Клайв Дэвис.



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