While the recordings are new, most of the songs have a previous history as Streisand releases. Two classic Streisand duets are updated with new partners: "What Kind of Fool", newly performed with John Legend (originally with Barry Gibb) and "Lost Inside of You", newly performed with Kenny Edmonds (originally with Kris Kristofferson). The deluxe edition features an additional duet with Edmonds along with previously released material featuring Frank Sinatra (who died in 1998), Bryan Adams, Barry Manilow, and Barry Gibb (from The Bee Gees).
Partners is one of 2014's best-selling albums in the US, having sold 856,000 copies.[3]Partners topped the Billboard 200 with sales of 196,000 copies in the first week, making Streisand the only recording artist to have a number-one album in six different decades (1960s, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s.)[4] It was also certified gold in November 2014 and platinum in January 2015, thus becoming Streisand's 52nd gold and 31st Platinum album (she also has 7 Gold-certified singles to her credit), more than any other female artist in history.[5]
The album was nominated for Best Traditional Pop Vocal album at the 57th Grammy Awards.
In its debut week, the album topped US Billboard 200 sales charts, selling over 196,000 copies.[6] It fell to number three the following week, selling 127,000 copies, the lowest second-week decline for a number one-debuting non-compilation album in nearly four years.[7] After just six weeks on sale, the album crossed half a million in US sales, having sold 526,000 copies total in the country.[8]Partners was 2014's seventh best-selling album in the US, having sold 856,000 copies.[3] As of September 2015, the album has sold 955,000 copies in the US.[9] It tops 1 million in traditional album sales in the week of August 14, 2017.[10]
In Canada and Australia the album also reached number one, selling 13,000 copies in each country.[11][12] In the Netherlands, New Zealand, and UK the album reached the number two spot on national sales charts, becoming Streisand's highest-charting album in the Netherlands since One Voice peaked at the same position in 1987.[13] In Ireland the album reached the number six position, becoming Streisand's highest-charting album since Guilty Pleasures in 2005.[14] The album debuted in the Top 10 in Austria, Germany, Spain and Poland, and reached Top 40 positions in Belgium (both regions), Denmark, Italy and Switzerland.
The album received mixed reviews from music critics. Matt Collar from AllMusic website praised the album and wrote that Partners "works as guided tour down Streisand's memory lane, and with her resonant voice still in supple shape, any excuse to hear her sing is a welcome invitation." Jim Farber from New York Daily News gave the album three out of five stars and wrote that "only four of the 12 cuts establish a real relationship between the singers, and most of those successes are crowded together at the start." Mikael Wood from Los Angeles Times wrote that while Streisand claimed that her goal with the album was not simply to remake some of her biggest hits but to provide "a whole other way of looking at the song", most of the dozen tracks on Partners "offer no such vantage", he also elected Streisand's duet with Babyface "Evergreen" the best moment of the album thanks to the vocals in "which she modulates her gale-force singing to suit his sumptuous quiet-storm groove". Stephen Holden, Nate Chinen and Ben Ratliff from the New York Times criticized the album and wrote that the "instrumentation and the vocal tracks are so processed in pursuit of a high-gloss perfection that any sense of two people standing side by side and singing their hearts out is lost", they also claimed that while Streisand's "voice has noticeably diminished in size" it pulls "its signature quality, ingrained sob" the duets "lack conversational or narrative flow, and you have an uncomfortable sense that the parts were spliced together after the fact". Helen Brown from The Telegraph gave the album two out of five stars and wrote that "while Streisand's voice still soars this lackluster collection falls into the icky celebrity duet traps".
Information is based on the Album's Liner Notes[21]
Walter Afanasieff - piano (2–7, 10–11), guitar, mandolin played by, concertina programmed by (12), bass played by (4–7, 10), synths played by, rhythm programmed by (2, 4–7, 10–11), orchestra arranged by (1–7, 9–12)
^"Czech Albums – Top 100". ČNS IFPI. Note: On the chart page, select 41.Týden 2014 on the field besides the words "CZ – ALBUMS – TOP 100" to retrieve the correct chart. Retrieved November 8, 2014.