Corneille - The Birth Of Cornelius (2008)
BAND/ARTIST: Corneille
- Title: The Birth Of Cornelius
- Year Of Release: 2008
- Label: Wagram Music
- Genre: French Pop, R'n'B
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3 320 Kbps
- Total Time: 51:42
- Total Size: 315 / 133 Mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
1. Back To Life 4:32
2. Love Is Good 3:24
3. Too Much Of Everything 3:43
4. I Never Loved You 3:53
5. Murder 4:04
6. Spending On You 3:58
7. Sweet Dependency 4:36
8. Home Is By You 5:41
9. I'll Never Call You Home Again 3:47
10. A Man Of This World 4:26
11. The One 4:30
12. Heaven 5:15
1. Back To Life 4:32
2. Love Is Good 3:24
3. Too Much Of Everything 3:43
4. I Never Loved You 3:53
5. Murder 4:04
6. Spending On You 3:58
7. Sweet Dependency 4:36
8. Home Is By You 5:41
9. I'll Never Call You Home Again 3:47
10. A Man Of This World 4:26
11. The One 4:30
12. Heaven 5:15
After releasing two platinum French-language albums that were heavily influenced by his family's murder at the hands of a Rwandan death squad, neo-soul singer Corneille realized he was "becoming a symbol for something, a persona." On the Rwandan-Canadian artist's first English-language album, feelings of despair and the search for peace are once again touched upon, but when the provocative title "Murder" leads to a breezy, almost Swing Out Sister song that uses homicide as a metaphor for breaking up, there's little doubt the "persona" is shaken. Save a couple autobiographical lines found in "A Man of This World" and "Heaven," plus the heart-wrenching genocide commentary that's "I'll Never Call You Home Again," the singer/songwriter's connection to the past here is mostly neo-soul, influenced by Stevie Wonder, Marvin Gaye, Sam Cooke, and others Corneille has declared were his father's favorites. Dad was also a Tracy Chapman fan and that figures into the mix, and judging by the humble acoustic soul that fuels key track "Too Much of Everything," some Bill Withers records must have been in the collection. Work in a modern John Legend-styled croon plus string arrangements from MFSB alum Larry Gold and you've got the sound, but the reason to fall for Corneille is his unique comfortable and conversational lyrics. Unfortunately, this self-produced album sounds a tad too bright and the great "I'll Never Call You Home Again" is way too heavy to be anything but a closing number. Still, returning fans will find Corneille's evolution remarkable, while all the newcomers will get a rich and rewarding soul-folk experience.
R&B | Pop | Musique Française | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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