Brian McKnight - Evolution Of A Man (2009)
BAND/ARTIST: Brian McKnight
- Title: Evolution Of A Man
- Year Of Release: 2009
- Label: eOne Music
- Genre: Soul, R&B
- Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
- Total Time: 00:49:53
- Total Size: 336 mb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01. The Brian Mcknight Show
02. Justalittlebit
03. Ibetchaneva
04. Whati'vebeenwaiting4
05. Whenurlovinme
06. Neversaygoodbye
07. Staytuned
08. Next2u
09. Imissu
10. Alwaysbemybaby
11. Babyit'su
12. While
13. Another You
14. Not Alone
Brian McKnight's lone set of non-Christmas material for Warner Bros., 2006's Ten, peaked exactly where his previous six proper albums topped out (within the Top Five of Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop chart), yet he finds himself on E1 (formerly Koch) for Evolution of a Man. Though he has written and produced plenty of his own material in the past, he did it all on this one, and presumably provided much of its instrumentation. It's a set that is predominantly slow, sparse, and intimate. Most of the album's last two-thirds offers familiar McKnight fare -- sensitive, soothing backdrops that are at least comforting when not uplifting. Earlier on, as well as in a couple instances deeper into the album, McKnight takes some risks with tracks that contain little more than pattering percussion and twinkling keyboards; here, the sonics are more memorable than the songs, and not much of the album as a whole holds up to repeated listening. Some of McKnight's devoted fanbase will find the album rather fascinating since it's a change of pace, more a collection of loose sketches than a highly polished set.
01. The Brian Mcknight Show
02. Justalittlebit
03. Ibetchaneva
04. Whati'vebeenwaiting4
05. Whenurlovinme
06. Neversaygoodbye
07. Staytuned
08. Next2u
09. Imissu
10. Alwaysbemybaby
11. Babyit'su
12. While
13. Another You
14. Not Alone
Brian McKnight's lone set of non-Christmas material for Warner Bros., 2006's Ten, peaked exactly where his previous six proper albums topped out (within the Top Five of Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop chart), yet he finds himself on E1 (formerly Koch) for Evolution of a Man. Though he has written and produced plenty of his own material in the past, he did it all on this one, and presumably provided much of its instrumentation. It's a set that is predominantly slow, sparse, and intimate. Most of the album's last two-thirds offers familiar McKnight fare -- sensitive, soothing backdrops that are at least comforting when not uplifting. Earlier on, as well as in a couple instances deeper into the album, McKnight takes some risks with tracks that contain little more than pattering percussion and twinkling keyboards; here, the sonics are more memorable than the songs, and not much of the album as a whole holds up to repeated listening. Some of McKnight's devoted fanbase will find the album rather fascinating since it's a change of pace, more a collection of loose sketches than a highly polished set.
Soul | R&B | FLAC / APE
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