La Toya

La Toya
Studio album by La Toya Jackson
Released 1988
Recorded 1987-1988
Genre Pop, dance, soul, R&B
Length 45:31
Label Teldec Records/RCA Records
Producer Full Force, Stock Aitken Waterman, Bobby Hart, Dick Eastman, Harold Faltermeyer, Steve Harvey
La Toya Jackson chronology
Imagination
(1986)
La Toya
(1988)
Bad Girl
(1991)
Singles from La Toya
  1. "(Ain't Nobody Loves You) Like I Do"
  2. "(Tell Me) She Means Nothing To You At All"
  3. "You're Gonna Get Rocked!"
  4. "You Blew"
  5. "Such a Wicked Love"

La Toya, also known as You're Gonna Get Rocked! is the 5th studio album by American singer La Toya Jackson. While the cover and box states the album's name as La Toya, the actual disc and cassette tape state the name as You're Gonna Get Rocked!. Therefore, the album is interchangeably referred to by both names.

The album includes "(Ain't Nobody Loves You) Like I Do" and "You're Gonna Get Rocked", which are, to date, two of the only five songs by La Toya Jackson to have an accompanying music video.

Contents

Album information

La Toya was the first album Jackson released since terminating father Joe Jackson as her manager and signing with a new label, RCA.[1] Jackson's musical goal was to evolve her teen pop sound to something more substantial.[2] "I know what I wanted to do, I always wanted a street sound. Michael kept saying 'Do it, move away, do your own sound.' That's why I moved to New York, to stop living in a fantasy world, get out of my sheltered life. As far as I'm concerned, it's my first album."[3]

To help develop her sound Jackson recruited British producers Stock Aitken Waterman. Jackson was disappointed to find upon arriving at their studio that SAW had already completed their three submissions, requiring only Jackson's vocals. Jackson had hoped to collaborate with them from scratch.[4] "Just Say No" was composed for US first lady Nancy Regan's anti-drug campaign. Their other two tracks, the "funky, gritty" "(Ain't Nobody Loves You) Like I Do" and melancholy ballad "(Tell Me) He Means Nothing to You at All" [sic] were starkly different from SAW's previous work.[5]

Jackson waited six months for US hip-hop producers Full Force to fit her into their busy schedule. Jackson wanted them to contribute a more aggressive sound to the LP.[4] At the time, Full Force member Paul Anthony disclosed that the group decided to work with Jackson because "we like the underdogs." [6] The four Full Force tracks include "You're Gonna Get Rocked!", "You Blew", "Such A Wicked Love", and "Not Giving Up On Love."

Other contributions were from producers Bobby Hart & Dick Eastman on the duet with John Pagano "If I Could Get To You", Harold Faltermeyer on the eccentric "Turn On The Radio", and Steve Harvey on "Does It Really Matter".[7] La Toya was recorded from March 1987 through 1988. The album was mixed down in New York.[4]

As a result of working with such a varied group of producers, the LP's two sides had distinctly different sounds. Side A, featuring tracks 1 through 5, had a hip-hop & breakbeat theme tailored for the US market while Side B was more oriented towards European synthpop.[8]

Jackson had high expectations for the album, having worked on it for two years. "I've had no private life at all for two years. My whole life has been this record. It's hard work. It's not glamorous at all."[2]

Jackson dedicated the album to the children of the world due to her involvement in the "Just Say No" campaign which was designated for children between the ages of 3 to 7.[9]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic [10]
NME [11]

The Miami News described the three "right on target" Stock Aitken Waterman songs as being "pop gems that display Jackson at her best."[5] "Just Say No" was commended as a "bouncy tune that glosses over" the anti-drugs slogan while Allmusic wrote that "Just Say No" brought "out the best of Jackson."[12] David Quantick, writing in NME, lauded the LP's hip-hop side with Full Force "a-nicking and a-sticking in full sample effect." However Quantick slammed the SAW-produced tracks on Side B, characterizing "Just Say No" as Marvin Gaye's "What's Going On" rammed up the nose of Abba's "I Have a Dream".[8]

The Miami News opined that pop "with a bit of funk and soul" best suited Jackson but criticized her voice as being drowned out on the Full Force songs.[5] On the other hand, the San Jose Mercury News asserted that tracks "You Blew" and "Such a Wicked Love" "bristle with the torrid funk of Full Force." [13] Allmusic described the Full Force tracks as "clever jams which position Jackson as a street-hip artist" but while also being "somewhat vacuous." "Does It Really Matter" was complimented as "a genuine, insinuating club/house cut."[12]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "You're Gonna Get Rocked!"   Full Force Full Force 5:03
2. "You Blew"   Full Force Full Force 4:55
3. "Such a Wicked Love"   Full Force Full Force 5:33
4. "Not Giving Up On Love"   Full Force Full Force 5:35
5. "If I Could Get to You"     Bobby Hart, Dick Eastman 4:13
6. "Turn on the Radio"     Harold Faltermeyer 3:52
7. "Just Say No"   La Toya Jackson, Jack Gordon, Stock Aitken & Waterman Stock, Aitken & Waterman 4:01
8. "Does It Really Matter"   La Toya Jackson, Jack Gordon, Linette McClellan, Phil Armstrong Steve Harvey 6:03
9. "(Tell Me) She Means Nothing to You at All"   La Toya Jackson, Stock Aitken & Waterman Stock, Aitken & Waterman 3:47
10. "(Ain't Nobody Loves You) Like I Do"   Stock Aitken & Waterman Stock, Aitken & Waterman 3:49
Total length:
45:31

Unreleased songs

A song called "Men Be Illin'" was originally recorded for the album, but not used. The song was recorded in early 1987 and copyrighted with the U.S. Copyright Office under the registration number PAu-986-950 on July 7 of that year. Jackson co-wrote the song with John F. Wilson, who she had previously worked with on the track "Love Talk" from her Imagination in 1986. According to U.S. Copyright records, the song was simply recorded on a cassette tape and claimed by Jackson, while another Jackson/Wilson track entitled "I Really Want to Do It Tonight" was claimed by Wilson.[14] Neither of the tracks were ever released on an album, although because of the dates of the recordings, it is widely believed that "Men Be Illin'" was intended to be released on Jackson's 1988 La Toya album.

Sources