Colour Me Free!

Colour Me Free!
Studio album by Joss Stone
Released 20 October 2009 (2009-10-20)
Recorded 2008
Studio
Genre
Length 52:29
Label Virgin
Producer
Joss Stone chronology
Introducing Joss Stone
(2007)
Colour Me Free!
(2009)
LP1
(2011)
US and Canadian cover
Singles from Colour Me Free!
  1. "Free Me"
    Released: 22 September 2009

Colour Me Free! is the fourth studio album by English singer and songwriter Joss Stone, released on 20 October 2009 by Virgin Records. The album was originally scheduled to be released in April 2009. However, Stone's label, EMI, delayed it to July and again to 20 October. "Free Me" was released on 22 September 2009 as the only single from the album. In the United States, the album's physical and digital releases were made available exclusively through Target and iTunes, respectively.[1] Colour Me Free! features guest appearances by Raphael Saadiq, Nas, Jeff Beck, Sheila E., David Sanborn and Jamie Hartman from Ben's Brother.

Despite some criticism towards its ballads, the album was met with generally positive reviews from music critics, who lauded its sonic direction and Stone's vocals. Colour Me Free! peaked at number 75 on the UK Albums Chart, becoming Stone's lowest-peaking album in the United Kingdom. It debuted at number 10 on the US Billboard 200, selling 27,000 units in its first week. However, it underperformed where it only spent one week before dropping out. The song "4 and 20" was included on the soundtrack to the 2010 romantic comedy film Valentine's Day.[2]

Background and recording

Stone began writing songs with Jonathan Shorten and Conner Reeves in Devon in early 2008.[3][4] Since they did not have a studio or any musicians, she paid a visit to Mama Stone's, a music venue that her mother was building at an old house in Wellington, Somerset, using the downstairs level as a performance space and the upstairs portion as writing rooms and a recording studio.[4][5] After noticing a vocal booth recently finished by construction crews, Stone was inspired to record an album. "I woke up the next day and it was like, 'I want to make an album and I don't want to think about it, I don't want to collect songs. I want to make it—now!'", Stone said.[5]

Stone called her assistant and asked for her touring musicians, who flew from the United States to Devon the following day.[4][5] Along with Reeves, Shorten and her band, Stone spent "an intense week of creation" at Mama Stone's. "We wrote the song and then we rehearsed it for, like, a little minute, and then we recorded it and then we wrote another one and recorded it. We didn't sit down and say, 'OK, how would we want this album to represent Joss? What songs are we going to choose? and blah, blah, blah ...' It wasn't any of that", Stone explained.[5] She also enlisted guest musicians such as rapper Nas, guitarist Jeff Beck, percussionist Sheila E. and saxophonist David Sanborn.[5]

Release and promotion

Stone performing at Coachella on 18 April 2009

Stone performed the song "Governmentalist" during voter registration group HeadCount's "Get Out the Vote Party" at the Highline Ballroom in New York City on 3 November 2008.[3][6] The track was released as a free download on Stone's and HeadCount's respective websites.[6] On 19 February 2009, Stone kicked off a promotional tour across the United Kingdom at Mama Stone's. The tour included concerts in Darlington, Bristol, Birmingham, Leeds, Glasgow, Liverpool, Manchester and Dover, and concluded on 4 March.[7]

In the United States, Stone supported the album with performances at the 2009 Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on 18 April 2009, at Club Nokia in Los Angeles on 23 April and at the Beach Rescue Concert in Asbury Park, New Jersey on 29 August.[8][9] She later announced European tour dates, visiting countries such as Germany, the Netherlands, Austria, Sweden, Poland, Portugal and Greece between June and September 2009.[10][11] From 21 to 23 November 2009, she performed three shows in the Brazilian cities of Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo and Porto Alegre, respectively.[12] Stone then returned to Europe in February and March 2010 for an additional run of tour dates.[13]

"Free Me" was released as the only single from Colour Me Free! on 22 September 2009.[14] Stone performed "Free Me" and a cover of Dusty Springfield's "Son of a Preacher Man" on Dancing with the Stars on 29 September 2009.[15] She also performed "Free Me" on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on 1 October 2009 and on Live! with Regis and Kelly on 9 October.[16][17] Stone appeared live on Later... with Jools Holland on 10 November 2009, performing "Free Me" and "Incredible".[18] On 13 November, she performed "Free Me", "I Believe It to My Soul" and "Parallel Lines" on the hour-long, pre-recorded edition of Later... with Jools Holland.[19]

On 16 November 2009, Stone appeared on the German late-night talk show TV total, where she performed "Free Me", as well as a duet with Swiss singer Stefanie Heinzmann on the latter's single "Unbreakable".[20] She later performed "Big Ol' Game" with Raphael Saadiq on The Tonight Show with Conan O'Brien on 20 January 2010.[21] Stone performed "Stalemate" with Jamie Hartman of Ben's Brother on The Wendy Williams Show on 24 March 2010, on The Early Show on 25 March, on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno on 29 March and on The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson on 2 April.[22][23][24][25]

Conflict with EMI

In May 2009, it was reported that Stone was willing to forfeit £2 million to terminate her four-album deal with EMI due to her dissatisfaction with the label after it was taken over by private equity firm Terra Firma in 2007. EMI refused to release her from her contract and took legal action in return, claiming she was in breach of contract by failing to deliver the master tapes for Colour Me Free![26] According to Stone, the album was set to be released in April 2009, but EMI postponed it to July. "I just don't know what's happening with it. They really need to pull their finger out. I've worked very hard on this record and I don't know what the plans are until EMI confirm a release date", she told the Daily Mail in March 2009.[27] Colour Me Free! was delayed once again until 20 October 2009.[28] By January 2010, Stone's dispute with EMI had been settled.[29]

The original cover art for Colour Me Free! features a black-and-white shot of Stone in a cage, which, according to Stone, her record label found offensive.[29] An alternative cover, containing Stone's name and the album title against a purple background, was used for the North American release of the album. A rep for Stone said EMI insisted on switching the album art, while an EMI spokesperson claimed that Stone agreed to the purple text-only cover.[30]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic67/100[31]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[32]
Chicago Sun-Times[33]
Entertainment WeeklyB[34]
Los Angeles Times[35]
Metro News Canada[36]
New York Post[37]
NY Daily News[38]
PopMatters6/10[39]
USA Today[40]
Yahoo! Music UK[41]

Colour Me Free! received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 67, based on seven reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[31] Angus Batey of Yahoo! Music UK wrote that Stone "delivers a string of superlative performances full of technique, character and [...] heart-pounding, raw, emotive soul", concluding that despite its "moments of bonkers excess", the album "proves, again, Joss Stone's considerable worth."[41] Graham Rockingham of Metro News Canada raved that the album has "a sonic depth that you can reach in and caress, which is something you can usually only find on old Stax or Muscle Shoals LPs. Yet Stone manages to merge her '60s leanings with more contemporary sounds".[36] Dan Aquilante of the New York Post opined that on Colour Me Free!, Stone is "at her bluesy, soul-singer best", stating that her voice is "powerful" and "reminiscent of the energy Aretha [Franklin] brought to many of her early recordings".[37] Steve Jones of USA Today commented that Stone "sings with more grit and gusto than a battalion of R&B princesses while taking a sledgehammer to pop conventions" and concluded that "[s]he's assertive, sassy and lets lovers know that they play with her heart at their own risk."[40]

The Observer's Hugh Montgomery called the album a "decent comeback" that "eschews [Stone's] last LP's hip-hop leanings for more straightforward retro soul funk", adding that "what most impresses is her voice, which has acquired emotional resonance to match its size."[42] Jim Farber of the NY Daily News found that "the material on Free far outperforms that on earlier CDs" and noted that the album showcases "a far more stripped-down sound than before, which leaves more room for Stone's newly grounded vocals to shine."[38] At Entertainment Weekly, Chris Willman viewed the first half of the album as "the best set of music [Stone has] done", while remaking that the second half "succumbs to R&B overproducers".[34] Despite comparing Colour Me Free!'s theme of "breaking free" to that of Introducing Joss Stone (2007), Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic stated that Stone's "raw vocal skills remain impressive, as does her taste in soul, and even if this feels off-kilter, not quite achieving a balance between retro and modernity, it does beat with a messy human heart, one that was subdued on Introducing".[32] PopMatters' Colin McGuire praised opening track "Free Me" as "easily one of the best songs [Stone has] ever written", but expressed that "setting the bar that high that early on [...] create[s] a level of expectation that the rest of the album's tracks simply don't live up to."[39] Mikael Wood of the Los Angeles Times opined that "Colour Me Free succeeds about as well as Stone's other records: It's quite good in the up-tempo bits [...] and a little soggy in the ballads."[35] Jim DeRogatis of the Chicago Sun-Times felt that "the problem is that Stone doesn't really have a master plan, or the discerning ear to tell her best moments [...] from her worst".[33]

Commercial performance

Colour Me Free! debuted at number 75 on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 2,960 copies, becoming Stone's lowest-peaking album in the United Kingdom to date.[43][44] As of July 2011, it had sold 14,071 copies in the UK.[43] The album debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200 with 27,000 copies sold in its first week.[45] The album had sold 93,000 copies in the US by July 2011.[46] Elsewhere, Colour Me Free! performed moderately on the charts, reaching number five in Switzerland, number 16 in the Netherlands, number 17 in Austria, number 25 in Portugal, and number 26 in Canada and Germany.[47][48]

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Free Me"  
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
3:53
2. "Could Have Been You"  
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
4:52
3. "Parallel Lines" (featuring Jeff Beck and Sheila E.)
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
4:26
4. "Lady"  
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
4:22
5. "4 and 20"  
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Reeves
5:06
6. "Big Ol' Game" (featuring Raphael Saadiq)
  • Stone
  • Saadiq
  • Stone
  • Saadiq
4:30
7. "Governmentalist" (featuring Nas)
  5:42
8. "Incredible"  
  • Stone
  • Shorten
  • Colin Hickson
  • Paddy Milner
  • Pete Cherry
  • Nikolaij Joel
  • Michael Bowes
  • Richie Stevens
  2:46
9. "You Got the Love"  
  • Arnecia Michelle Harris
  • Anthony B. Stephens
  3:35
10. "I Believe It to My Soul" (featuring David Sanborn)Ray CharlesPhil Ramone 4:29
11. "Stalemate" (with Jamie Hartman)
  • Hartman
  • Camilla Boler
  • Stone
4:18
12. "Girlfriend on Demand"  Mackenzie 4:30
13. "Mr Wankerman" (hidden track) (not featured on US and Canadian pressings)
  13:44
Sampling credits

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Colour Me Free![51]

  • Joss Stone – vocals (all tracks); production (tracks 1–6); backing vocals (tracks 3–5); album coordination, executive producer
  • Darren Abraham – backing vocals, percussion (track 7)
  • Ainsley Adams – assistant engineering (track 11)
  • Rob Bacon – guitar solo (track 7)
  • Kenya Baker – guitar (tracks 1–5, 9); engineering, recording (track 2); additional guitar (track 6)
  • Paul Baker – harp (track 12)
  • Jeff Beck – vocals (track 3)
  • Robert Berg – viola (track 12)
  • Sally Berman – violin (track 12)
  • Michael Bowes – percussion (track 8)
  • Alan Branch – additional recording, assistant engineering (track 3)
  • Karl Brazildrums, percussion (track 11)
  • Robert Brosseau – violin (track 12)
  • Gerry Brown – string recording (tracks 2, 5, 12)
  • Chuck Brungardt – mixing (tracks 1, 3–9, 12); assistant engineering (track 5); engineering, recording (track 9)
  • Lemar Carter – drums (tracks 1–5, 9)
  • Pete Cherry – bass (track 8)
  • Courtney Christian – album coordination
  • Patricia Cloud – alto flute, flute (track 12)
  • Paul Conroy – album coordination
  • Tom Coyne – mastering
  • Marc "Makani" Cyril – backing vocals, bass (track 7)
  • Mike Davistenor trombone (track 10)
  • Sir Mychael Davison – additional recording, assistant engineering (track 3)
  • Drew Dembowski – contrabass (track 12)
  • Bojan Dugic – recording (track 6)
  • Sheila E. – vocals (track 3)
  • Hollie Farris – trumpet (tracks 1–5, 9)
  • Joe Ferla – mixing, recording (track 10)
  • Sam Formicola – viola (track 12)
  • Steve Gadd – drums (track 10)
  • Armen Garabedian – violin (track 12)
  • Gil GoldsteinRhodes (track 10)
  • Dyre Gormsen – recording (track 11)
  • Agnes Gottschewski – violin (track 12)
  • Lynn Grants – viola (track 12)
  • Maurice Grants – cello (track 12)
  • Steven Grier – beatbox (track 4)
  • Charlie Happiness – bass harmonica, sitar (track 1)
  • Keyon Harold – trumpet (track 10)
  • Jamie Hartman12-string guitar, production, Rhodes, synth strings, vocals (track 11)
  • Vahe Hayrikian – cello (track 12)
  • Amy Hershberger – violin (track 12)
  • Iain Hill – assistant engineering (track 11)
  • Kris Houston – piano (track 11)
  • Pete Iannacone – bass (tracks 1–4, 9)
  • Pete Ibsen – recording (track 11)
  • Antonia Jenae – backing vocals (track 6)
  • Nikolaij Joel – guitar (track 8)
  • Howard Johnsonbaritone saxophone (track 10)
  • Charles Jones – backing vocals (tracks 3, 8)
  • Jonathan Joseph – recording (tracks 1–5, 12); engineering (tracks 2, 4)
  • Dan Kelley – horn (track 12)

  • Ellison Kendrick – backing vocals (tracks 3, 6, 8, 9)
  • Joe Ketendjian – violin (track 12)
  • Tony Kofi – saxophone (track 8)
  • Mellissa LaRochelle – backing vocals (track 9)
  • Artia Lockett – backing vocals (tracks 6, 9)
  • Christian Lohr – Hammond (tracks 2–4, 9); keyboards (tracks 2, 3); piano (tracks 4, 5)
  • Dan Mackenzie – production (track 12)
  • Neville Malcolm – upright bass (track 5); backing vocals, guitar (track 7)
  • Russell Malone – guitar (track 10)
  • Marlon Marcel – assistant engineering (tracks 1–5)
  • Lou Marinitenor saxophone (track 10)
  • Miguel Martinez – cello (track 12)
  • Liane Mautner – violin (track 12)
  • Christian McBride – bass (track 10)
  • Paddy Miller – keyboards (track 8)
  • Paula Mitchell – backing vocals (track 5)
  • Malcolm Moore – bass (track 11)
  • Stanton Moore – drums (track 1)
  • Ryan Moys – additional recording, assistant engineering (track 12)
  • Nasrap (track 7)
  • Karolina Naziemiec – viola (track 12)
  • Stephanie O'Keefe – horn (track 12)
  • Bobby Ozuna – percussion (tracks 1, 4); additional percussion (track 3)
  • Abel Pabon – piano (track 9)
  • Ricky Pederson – Hammond (track 10)
  • Charles Pillow – bass clarinet (track 10)
  • Luke Potashnik – guitar (track 11)
  • James Poyser – piano (track 12)
  • Natasha Radford – album coordination
  • Phil Ramone – production (track 10)
  • Conner Reeves – production (tracks 1–5); backing vocals (tracks 4, 5)
  • Paul Riserstring arrangements (tracks 2, 5, 12); The Paul Riser Orchestra conductor (track 12)
  • Winston Rollins – trombone (tracks 1–4)
  • Anatoly Rosinsky – violin (track 12)
  • Raphael Saadiq – bass (track 2); backing vocals, bass, drums, guitar, percussion, production, vocals (track 6)
  • David Sanbornalto saxophone (track 10)
  • Jonathan Shorten – production (tracks 1–5); piano (track 2); clavinet (track 3); Wurlitzer (track 4); Hammond (tracks 5, 7); engineering, recording (track 7)
  • Latonya Shorter – backing vocals (track 9)
  • Sacha Skarbek – production, Rhodes (track 11)
  • Jerry Smith – engineering, recording (track 8)
  • Lew Soloff – trumpet (track 10)
  • Paul Sternhagen – percussion (track 12)
  • Richie Stevens – backing vocals (track 7); drums (tracks 7, 8)
  • Paul Suarez – assistant engineering (tracks 1–5, 7–9, 12)
  • James Tanksley – additional recording (tracks 1–4)
  • Mike Velerio – contrabass (track 12)
  • Morgan Visconti – string arrangements (track 11)
  • Jeff Watkins – saxophone (tracks 1–4, 9)
  • Jeremy Wheatley – mixing (track 11)
  • Elizabeth Wilson – violin (track 12)
  • Phil Yao – horn (track 12)
  • John Yoakum – English horn, oboe (track 12)

Charts

Chart (2009–10) Peak
position
Australian Digital Albums Chart[52] 36
Austrian Albums Chart[53] 17
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)[47] 50
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia)[54] 56
Canadian Albums Chart[48] 26
Croatian Foreign Albums Chart[55] 37
Dutch Albums Chart[56] 16
French Albums Chart[57] 63
German Albums Chart[58] 26
Italian Albums Chart[59] 53
Japanese Albums Chart[60] 102
Portuguese Albums Chart[61] 25
Swiss Albums Chart[62] 5
UK Albums Chart[44] 75
UK R&B Albums Chart[63] 10
US Billboard 200[64] 10
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums[65] 9

Release history

Region Date Label Ref.
Canada 20 October 2009 EMI [66]
United States Virgin [32]
Germany 30 October 2009 EMI [67]
Italy [68]
France 2 November 2009 [69]
United Kingdom Virgin [70]
Australia 6 November 2009 EMI [71]
Japan 18 November 2009 [72]

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