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Sarah Connor (album)

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Sarah Connor
Studio album by
Released9 March 2004 (2004-03-09)
Recorded2000–2004
Genre
Length42:55
Label
Producer
Sarah Connor chronology
Key to My Soul
(2003)
Sarah Connor
(2004)
Naughty but Nice
(2005)

Sarah Connor is a studio album by German recording artist Sarah Connor. It was released by Epic Records and Sony Music on 9 March 2004 in the United States, marking her North American debut. It compiles selected songs from her first three studio albums Green Eyed Soul (2001), Unbelievable (2002) and Key to My Soul (2003). Comprising nearly all of her singles released up to then, Sarah Connor includes the number-one hits "From Sarah with Love" and "Music Is the Key", both produced by frequent collaborators Rob Tyger and Kay Denar, as well as production by Bülent Aris, Mekong Age, and American musicians Jerry Duplessis, and Wyclef Jean.

Propelled by the unexpected success of her single "Bounce", the album reached the lower half of US Billboard 200 and debut atop Billboard's Top Heatseekers, the latter of which highlights the sales by new and developing musical recording artists. The collection garnered a mixed reception from American music critics, who felt that the "tracks work because they're qualified by their Europop context. Like the brightest of that genre, they shine like flashy and disposable glowsticks before ultimately terminating."[1]

Background

[edit]

Sarah Connor was released in 2004 in response to the success of the lead single "Bounce". Connor is Germany's biggest-selling female pop star, but despite singing in English she never seriously attempted to take her music outside of German-speaking countries (she released "Bounce" in England in 2003 with little promotion though as in America it reached the top 20).

In Fall 2003 Sarah released "Key to My Soul" early on during her pregnancy. It was around this time her song "Bounce" was found by some American DJs, who put it on their playlists. Soon "Bounce" featured on playlists across the US and reached number 54. Sony realized they had a potential hit on their hands and decided to try and release a Sarah Connor CD in the US. With no time to record and Sarah on a baby break they decided to release a compilation of her previous singles from all three albums. The album's cover is the same as that of Green Eyed Soul, albeit with the text Green Eyed Soul removed.

The version of "Bounce" included on this compilation is the clean radio edit. This is the mix that was released to US radio (and also featured on the US compilation Now That's What I Call Music! Volume 15, released in March 2004).

Critical response

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
USA Today[2]

Elysa Gardner, writing for USA Today, found that "Connor may not have the technical prowess of, say, Christina Aguilera or Kelly Clarkson, but her vocal approach, which veers from breathy ostentation to bombastic belting, will sound painfully familiar. So will helium-fueled hip-hop workouts such as the hit "Bounce" and maudlin ballads such as "Music Is the Key," one of several predictable collaborations with male rap and R&B artists. Connor fares better on the relatively crisp, breezy He's Unbelievable and the blithely funky Mary Jane Girls cover "In My House," but in general, her green-eyed soul is a pale facsimile of the real thing."[2] AllMusic editor Johnny Loftus wrote that "like most of Sarah Connor, the tracks work because they're qualified by their Europop context. Like the brightest of that genre, they shine like flashy and disposable glowsticks before ultimately terminating."[1]

Chart performance

[edit]

Released on 9 March 2004 in Canada and the United States, Sarah Connor debuted and peaked at number 106 on the US Billboard 200.[3] It also debuted atop Billboard's Top Heatseekers chart.[4] Connor was not able to promote the album stateside since she was heavily pregnant with her first child at that time.

Track listing

[edit]

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Sarah Connor.[5]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Bounce"
  • Aris
  • Dirk van Gercum
3:42
2."French Kissing"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:36
3."Let's Get Back to Bed – Boy!" (featuring TQ)
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:59
4."Skin on Skin"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:03
5."One Nite Stand (Of Wolves and Sheep)" (featuring Wyclef Jean)
  • Duplessis
  • Jean
3:58
6."He's Unbelievable"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:27
7."Music Is the Key" (featuring Naturally 7)
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:04
8."Love Is Color-Blind" (featuring TQ)
  • Denar
  • Quaites
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:47
9."I'm Gonna Find You (Osla Suite)"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:47
10."In My House"Rick James
  • Adam Charon
  • Mekong Age
  • Rufi-Oh
3:15
11."Turn Off the Lights"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:23
Japanese edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Bounce"
  • Aris
  • Dirk van Gercum
3:42
2."French Kissing"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:36
3."Let's Get Back to Bed – Boy!" (featuring TQ)
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:59
4."One Nite Stand (Of Wolves and Sheep)" (featuring Wyclef Jean)
  • Duplessis
  • Jean
3:58
5."He's Unbelievable"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:27
6."Music Is the Key" (featuring Naturally 7)
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:04
7."Love Is Color-Blind" (featuring TQ)
  • Denar
  • Quaites
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:47
8."I'm Gonna Find You (Osla Suite)"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:47
9."Wait 'Til You Hear from Me"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
4:19
10."From Sarah with Love"
  • Connor
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
5:08
11."Turn Off the Lights"
  • Denar
  • Tyger
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:23
12."Bounce" (Cool & Dre Urban Remix)
  • Aris
  • Cottura
  • Freeman
3:42
13."Bounce" (Album Version)
  • Aris
  • Cottura
  • Freeman
  • Denar
  • Tyger
3:42

Sample credits

Charts

[edit]
Chart (2004) Peak
position
US Billboard 200[3] 106
US Heatseekers Albums (Billboard)[4] 1

References

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  1. ^ a b c Sarah Connor at AllMusic
  2. ^ a b Jones, Steve. "Cassidy raps; Van Hunt riffs". USA Today. Archived from the original on October 25, 2012.
  3. ^ a b "Sarah Connor Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved 2018-11-03.
  4. ^ a b "Sarah Connor Chart History (Heatseekers Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 2018-11-03.
  5. ^ Sarah Connor (Media notes). Sarah Connor. Sony Music. 2004.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)