Lionel Richie

Rate this:

Home > Music > Lionel Richie > Discography

Lionel Richie
Lionel Richie
Release Date: 1982
Running Time: 37:45
Label: Motown

Lionel Richie's solo career began while he was still in the Commodores, as he wrote and sang (as a duet with Diana Ross) the theme to the Brooke Shields romance Endless Love, which became a bigger hit than any of the group's singles, thereby setting the stage for his departure and his 1982 self-titled solo debut. He wasn't working in unfamiliar territory, or with new musicians. The Commodores decided to work as their own band, so their producer, James Anthony Carmichael, was able to devote his energy to working on Richie's album. Using the pop-crossover ballad style of "Endless Love," "Three Times a Lady," and "Easy" as their template, the duo turned Lionel Richie into a sleek, state-of-the-art record that, at its best, provides some irresistible pop pleasures. The key to its success -- and the reason it was scorned by some Commodores fans -- is that Richie doesn't even make a pretense of funk here, leaving behind the loose, elastic grooves of his previous bands (a move that makes sense, since his voice never suited that style particularly well), choosing to concentrate on ballads and sparkly mid-tempo pop, peppered with a few stylish dance grooves. The ballads, of course, provided two big hits with "My Love" and "Truly," two numbers that illustrate that he was moving ever-closer to mainstream pop, since these are unapologetic AOR slow-dance tunes. The other big hit, "You Are," is an effervescent, wonderful pop tune that showcases Richie at his sunniest; it's one of his greatest singles. Throughout the first part of the record, the dance numbers are served up and they're very good -- "Serves You Right" has a shiny, propulsive groove, while "Tell Me" jams nicely. After "You Are," the record bogs down with a couple of ballads that are on the wrong side of adult contemporary -- too formless, too hookless to really catch hold -- but they don't hurt the first seven songs, which form a dynamic mainstream pop-soul record, one of the best the early '80s had to offer. It's the sound of Lionel Richie finding his solo voice, and, the next time out, he knew how to use it even better than he does here. [The 2003 reissue of Lionel Richie includes two bonus tracks: a solo demo of "Endless Love" which not only fits perfectly with this record, but is less cloying, and an instrumental of "You Are" whose primary worth is to hear the detail and expertise in the production Richie and Carmichael assembled.] Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks:
TitleComposerTime
1Serves You RightRichie, McClain, Phillinganes5:14
2Wandering StrangerRichie5:38
3Tell MeCochrane, Richie5:32
4My LoveRichie4:08
5Round and RoundRichie, Cochrane4:57
6TrulyCochrane, Richie3:26
7You AreRichie, Harvey Ritchie5:05
8You Mean More to MeRichie3:08
9Just Put Some Love in Your HeartRichie1:27

Releases:
YearTypeLabel
CSMotown
CSMotown
1998CDPolydor
1992CDMotown
1992CDMotown



Member Of:
The Commodores
More >>

Similar Artists:
James Ingram
Whitney Houston
Michael Jackson
Luther Vandross
Kenny Rogers
More >>

Influenced By:
The Spinners
Marvin Gaye
Al Green
Stevie Wonder
Quincy Jones
More >>

Followers:
Svala
Justin Timberlake
Angel Grant
Janet Jackson
Toni Braxton
More >>







Browse More Music:
# A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

Follow Starpulse