Love in Motion | ||||
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Studio album by Anika Moa | ||||
Released | 12 March 2010release history) | (see|||
Recorded | Roundhead Studios, Boatshed Studio, Radio New Zealand; 2009 |
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Genre | Pop, pop rock, electropop | |||
Length | 41:07 | |||
Label | Flightless Birds/EMI | |||
Producer | Anika Moa, Andre Upston | |||
Anika Moa chronology | ||||
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Singles from Love in Motion | ||||
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Love in Motion is the fourth studio album by New Zealand Pop recording artist Anika Moa. It was released by EMI Records internationally on 12 March 2010. The album debuted and peaked at number four on the New Zealand Albums Chart. Promotion for the album included a short tour of Westfield shopping malls across New Zealand the week of the album's release, and a concert tour followed in May 2010.
Critical reviews for the album have been mostly positive, with Moa's lyrical writing received well. "Running Through the Fire (Storm)" was released as the album's lead single, which peaked at number thirty-eight on the Singles Chart. "Blame It on the Rain", the album's second single, failed to chart.
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Moa has said that her partner, burlesque dancer Azaria Universe, with whom she entered into a civil union in February 2010,[1] was a major inspiration for the album.[2][3] Love in Motion is dedicated to Universe, with the CD liner bearing the message, "For Azaria, let it be you, I fall into".[4]
When writing the album, Moa wanted to put the word "love" into the title of every song. Ultimately, four of the ten track titles contain "love" or "loves", and every song has the word in its lyrics.[1] In interviews, Moa has revealed the inspiration and circumstances around many of its songs. She said that "I Am the Woman Who Loves You" is about when she and Universe first met and that "Love Me Again" is about "taking the piss out of [her] love for Azaria",[2] calling the latter "a real Anika Moa song."[5] According to Moa, "Two Hearts" and "Secrets and Lies" were inspired by people who "fucked [her] off". "Secrets and Lies" was written while Moa says she was "in a really bad mood", however she asserts that it is her favourite track on the album. Moa said that "Blame It On the Rain" is about a person who Moa "will never ever name because they will be really, really sad if they knew".[3] "In the Air" is about Moa's fear of flying,[6] and "Running Through the Fire (Storm)", originally simply called "Storm", was prompted by the death of Moa's father.[7][8]
After interviewing Moa, The New Zealand Herald's Scott Kara said that Love in Motion "is about love on all levels". Moa described love as having "so many aspects to it."[3] She also said that "all of the songs are about love that's true."[9] In an interview with Wendyl Nissen from Newstalk ZB, Moa explained, "Most of the songs that I write are based on memories of my life or memories of someone who I know's life". She also mentioned that the album was influenced by many types of love; not only her own, but also the love of her family, and love illustrated on soap operas such as Shortland Street and Grey's Anatomy.[10]
Moa wrote the songs for Love in Motion in two weeks, and it was recorded in two more weeks.[11][12] Most of the album was written in Melbourne,[11] while recording took place at three locations: Roundhead Studios, Boatshed Studio and Radio New Zealand.[13] Moa and Andre Upston produced the album.[4]
Moa stated that "this is the first album that I really thought about what I wanted ... I wanted to keep [the songs] simple in structure, concentrating on the layering of vocals and guitars."[14] With Love in Motion, Moa moved away from her traditional pop and country pop sound to a pop rock environment. She intentionally changed the sound, through alterations in production and engineering, rather than the writing style.[15] Moa told co-producer Andre Upston that she wanted the album to sound "dirty and gritty."[16] The album combines the genres of pop rock,[17] "80s pop",[6] bubblegum pop,[18] and rock'n'roll,[3] as well as including both acoustic[19] and electropop,[9][18] and contains layered harmonies.[20] Comparisons to the work of Ladyhawke, Sharon O'Neill, Pat Benatar[6] and Bic Runga have been made.[19] The sound of "I Am the Woman Who Loves You", noted as a standout track by critics,[19][20] was called "big but not overblown...stylish and swooning".[6]
Lyrically, Love in Motion explores a wide variety of the main theme of love. The title track centres around "pure, unguarded joy", and sexual innuendo exists during "Love Me Again",[19] while "Two Hearts" contains harsh lines and "Secrets and Lies" includes "don't-mess-with-me outpourings".[6] Various songs also examine conflict, and others, the loss of love.[19]
Love in Motion was released digitally by the Flightless Birds label internationally on 12 March 2010. A New Zealand release followed on 5 April, by EMI Records, as both digital download[21] and CD formats.[22][23] During the week of the album's release (6 – 10 April), Moa toured several Westfield shopping malls in Auckland, Hamilton, Wellington and Christchurch, playing for free to the public.[24][25] In Australia, EMI released the album on 10 September 2010.[26] A special edition was released on 18 October 2010, featuring a second disc of acoustic versions of each track on the album.[27] Moa said that "I've chosen to record an acoustic version of the album because I believe in the vulnerable, simplistic side of music and writing. The way you connect the songs the first time you hear it, no drums, no effects, no funky bass lines, just your voice and a guitar... it feels like magic."[12]
Love in Motion tour | |
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A promotional poster for the tour |
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Concert tour by Anika Moa | |
Location | New Zealand |
Associated album | Love in Motion |
Start date | 27 May 2010 |
End date | 5 June 2010 |
Shows | 6 |
A concert tour was held in various New Zealand cities in late May and early June 2010.[28][29] Chip Matthews, Geoff Maddock and Nick Gaffaney, who all played on the album, joined Moa on the tour.[30]
Date | City | Venue |
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27 May | Queenstown | Revolver |
28 May | Timaru | No 8 Wired Bar |
29 May | Christchurch | Al's Bar |
3 June | Wellington | San Fran Bathhouse |
4 June | Auckland | Galatos |
5 June | Hamilton | The Meteor |
Karyn Cushen of Undertheradar said "Moa wears her new musical influence well...featuring less pop, less blues and less country influences," and called the tour shows "a refreshing change."[31] The Timaru Herald's Katarina Filipe praised Moa's live performing nature, noting that "the radio and CD versions were nothing compared to her on-stage performance".[32] Vicki Anderson of The Press lauded the accompaniment by Matthews, Maddock and Gaffaney for giving songs "new energy",[33] while the Waikato Times' Kate Monahan called the show "a high-energy, emotionally powerful performance".[34]
Love in Motion | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Amplifier[18] | (favourable) |
The Dominion Post[35] | |
Elsewhere[36] | (mixed) |
The Nelson Mail[19] | |
The New Zealand Herald[6] | |
North & South[17] | (favourable) |
Otago Daily Times[20] | |
The Press[37] | (favourable) |
Waikato Times[38] |
Reviews for Love in Motion were mostly positive. Tom Cardy of The Dominion Post called the album "near faultless" and gave it a rating of five-out-of-five stars, commenting that "Moa's risky decision ... to follow her own path ... was the right one."[35] The Nelson Mail's Nick Ward praised the "slightly tough" album, putting it "up there with her best work."[19] Scott Kara of The New Zealand Herald called the album "diverse and interesting," and gave it four out of five stars.[6] Amplifier's Jo Tindling compared the work with that of Ladyhawke, and called it "different from her other work but ... her voice is still as tender and sweet as it ever was".[18] Simon Sweetman from North & South described the album as "an almost understated collection of love songs – possibly Moa's strongest effort."[17] The Bay of Plenty Times' Kristin MacFarlane said that "Anika Moa fans...certainly won't be disappointed".[39] Vicki Anderson of The Press complimented Moa's lyrics, writing, "Whoever coined the phrase 'heart on sleeve' must have had Moa in mind." She concluded, "Love in Motion only serves to confirm my belief that Anika Moa is one of New Zealand's best songwriters."[37]
However, Graham Reid from Elsewhere wrote that "it is...a lot of very personal love being revealed and explored here and some will doubtless find that introspective nature and narrow wavelength less appealing than what has preceded it."[36] The Otago Daily Times' Shane Gilchrest gave Love in Motion three stars, saying that Moa "ends up playing it a bit too safe."[20] James Thompson from the Waikato Times commended "the power of the lyrics", but said that "regrettably, Love in Motion will not be ... a hugely successful album."[38]
Love in Motion won the Best Female Solo Artist award at the 2010 New Zealand Music Awards, beating Holy Smoke by Gin Wigmore and Humour and the Misfortune of Others by Hollie Smith. It was also nominated for the awards of Album of the Year and Best Pop Album, which were both won by Wigmore's album.[40][41]
Love in Motion peaked at its début position of number four on the RIANZ New Zealand Albums Chart. The album remained on the chart for eleven non-consecutive weeks.[42] This makes it Moa's second-highest peaking album, behind Thinking Room (2001), which peaked at number-one on the Albums Chart. It is also her third-longest charting album, behind Thinking Room and In Swings the Tide (2007), which spent forty-five and thirty-nine weeks on the chart, respectively.[43]
The lead single from Love in Motion, "Running Through the Fire (Storm)", was released in New Zealand on 5 April 2010, the same day as the album.[44] "Running Through the Fire (Storm)" briefly charted on the New Zealand Singles Chart in its week of release, at number thirty-eight. Despite this, the song fell off the chart the next week.[45] "Blame It on the Rain" was released as the Australian single via digital download on 27 August,[46][47] although it did not appear on any singles chart.
All tracks written by Anika Moa.[48]
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Country | Date | Label |
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Austria[49] | 12 March 2010 | Flightless Birds |
Canada[50] | ||
France[51] | ||
Germany[52] | ||
Italy[53] | ||
Japan[54] | ||
Mexico[55] | ||
Netherlands [56] | ||
Spain[57] | ||
Sweden[58] | ||
Switzerland[59] | ||
United States[60] | ||
New Zealand[21] | 5 April 2010 | Flightless Birds/EMI |
Australia[26] | 10 September 2010 |
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