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Bonnie Pointer (1978 album)

1978 album by Bonnie Pointer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bonnie Pointer (1978 album)
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Bonnie Pointer is the debut studio album by Bonnie Pointer, released in 1978 on the Motown label.

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History

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The album was released a year after her dismissal from the Pointer Sisters, and by this time, she married Motown Records producer Jeffrey Bowen, who produced for the Temptations, Jermaine Jackson, and Commodores.[2][3] The album consisted of two 1960s Motown covers from Brenda Holloway and the Elgins, and the album cover began a series of one of her "Red" and "Purple" albums.[4] In that same year, the first single released on the album, Free Me From My Freedom/Tie Me to A Tree (Handcuff Me), was released – but banned from radio due to "raunchy lyrics", but became a hit for Pointer.[3][5] The song first peaked at No. 10,[6][7] No. 18,[8] and peaked at No. 17 again in January 1979, and on No. 11 on the same chart in February 1979, reported from Jet Magazine.[9][10][11] In 1979, a disco cover of the Elgins' Heaven Must Have Sent You, was released as a 12 inch single and became a hit, though the album contained a version more faithful to the original. The success of the single led to her appearing on numerous television shows to promote the album.[12] In the early fall of 1979 it peaked at No. 11 on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 and No. 10 on Cash Box[13] that October.[14] In 1980, she was interviewed by Jet Magazine about the meaning of the "Free Me From My Freedom".[15]

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Reception

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Andrew Hamilton from AllMusic gave the album 2.5 out of 5 stars stating that "For Bonnie Pointer's first LP on Motown, producer/hubby Jeffrey Bowen brought some new songs to the sessions this time. The most exciting, "Free Me from My Freedom," has a perky rhythm that's accented by a bubbly bass. Zesty backing voices matched Pointer's stinging vocal. However, the anti-women's-lib lyrics didn't go over well in the '70s. She displays softness on "My Everything", a classy ballad that isn't her forte. And she's back in her element on the disco-arranged "Heaven Must Have Sent You," but it doesn't get interesting until she starts growling. Bowen recycles the formula for "I Can't Help Myself (Sugar Pie Honey Bunch)" and "Jimmy Mack" (on her next album), but neither compares to the original, though the latter funks hard near the fade. Arresting productions and arrangements set off "I Love to Sing to You" and "More and More"; the midtempo, flamenco-flavored love songs are tastefully done. Smokey Robinson's "When I'm Gone" works better than the other Motown oldies. Bowen's sound worked better on singles and 12" releases; it gets redundant on LPs."[1]

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Track listing

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Personnel

Adapted from liner notes.[17]

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Charts

The album peaked at No. 96 on the Billboard Hot 200.[18] It also peaked at No. 34 on the Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums chart.[19]

References

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