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What You See Is What You Sweat

1991 studio album by Aretha Franklin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

What You See Is What You Sweat
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What You See Is What You Sweat is the thirty-third studio album by American singer Aretha Franklin, released on July 2, 1991, by Arista Records.

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The album received mixed reviews, with some praising Franklin's vocal performance while others criticized the album's production and song quality. It peaked at number 153 on US Billboard 200, dropping off after seven weeks. This was Franklin's first new release in the Nielsen SoundScan era.

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Critical reception

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More information Review scores, Source ...

Rolling Stone editor Stephen Holden found that "athough the material runs a gamut of styles, Franklin infuses her personality so indelibly into every song that somehow it all holds together." Rating the album three ouf of five stars, he concluded: "Because Franklin brings more spirit than usual to the record, What You See Is What You Sweat stands as one of her better albums. If the songs are uneven, they don't prevent the Queen of Soul from exuberantly expressing the breadth of her musical personality, from regal pop-gospel diva to funky everyday person."[8] AllMusic also gave the album three ouf of five stars.[1] People Magazine gave a mixed review.[9]

New York Times critic Jon Pareles found that What You See Is What You Sweat was as "awkward as its title. Like Ms. Franklin's recent albums, it tacks a 1960's oldie [...] onto a group of new pop songs [though] they seem [like] the rejects from other projects." Parles further remarked: "The frustrating thing is that Franklin can still sing like no one else; her voice swoops, curves, coos, growls, caresses. Amid the trendy and pretentious trappings, it's a beacon of emotion. Trying to keep up with the latest pop only holds her back."[10] NME David Quantick felt that "only Vandross seems to have noticed the 1990s, and several tracks are burdened with lame mid-'80s "funky" production clutter and clatter. This record is mostly a dull mess."[7]

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Commercial performance

The album opened at number 167 on the US Billboard 200 and peaked at number 153 the following week.[11] It marked Franklin's lowest-charting album since Soft and Beautiful (1969).[11] By February 1998, the album had sold 179,000 units, domestically.[12]

Track listing

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Personnel

  • Aretha Franklin – lead vocals, piano, background vocals
  • Luther Vandross - duet vocal
  • Michael McDonald - duet vocal
  • Paul Jackson Jr. – guitar
  • Peter Schwartz – additional keyboards
  • Michel Legrand – synthesizer
  • Franck Thore – Pan pipes
  • Dean Parks – guitar
  • Burt Bacharach – keyboards
  • Marcus Miller – bass guitar
  • Thierry Eliez – piano
  • Elliot Wolff – keyboards, drum programming
  • Teddy F. White – guitar
  • Al Turner – bass guitar
  • Buster Marbury – drums
  • Michael Boddicker – keyboards, programming
  • Larry Fratangelo – percussion
  • Hubert Eaves III – keyboards, drum programming
  • Charles Scales – synthesizer
  • Rick Iantosca – acoustic guitar
  • Oliver Leiber – keyboards, drum programming, guitar
  • Jason Miles – keyboards
  • Dominique Bertram – bass guitar
  • Joshua Thompson – keyboards, guitar, synthesizer
  • Vernon Black – guitar
  • Randy Waldman – keyboards
  • Onita Sanders – harp
  • André Ceccarelli – drums
  • Louis Biancaniello – keyboards, programming
  • Larry Williams – programming
  • David Foster – keyboards, programming
  • Paulinho da Costa – percussion
  • Candy Dulfer – saxophone
  • Guy Vaughn – drum programming
  • David Townsend – guitar
  • Narada Michael Walden – drums, programming
  • Nat Adderley Jr. – keyboards
  • Bobby Wooten – keyboards, electric piano, drum programming, synthesizer
  • David Boruff – saxophone
  • Rudolph Stansfield – piano
  • Jean-Marc Benais – guitar
  • Gene Lennon – programming
  • Skip Anderson – keyboards
  • Cindy Mizelle – background vocals
  • Jesse Richardson – background vocals
  • Sandra Feva – background vocals
  • Brenda Corbett – background vocals
  • Fonzi Thornton – background vocals
  • Diane Green – background vocals
  • Sherry Fox – background vocals
  • Portia Griffin – background vocals
  • Margaret Branch – background vocals
  • Jarvis Barker – background vocals
  • Nikita Germaine – background vocals
  • Skyler Jett – background vocals
  • Jeanie Tracy – background vocals
  • Tony Lindsay – background vocals
  • Gwen Guthrie – background vocals
  • Tawatha Agee – background vocals
  • Donna Davis – background vocals
  • Marj Haber – background vocals
  • Esther Ridgeway – background vocals
  • Gloria Ridgeway – background vocals
  • Gracie Ridgeway – background vocals
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Charts

More information Chart (1991), Peak position ...

References

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