Rapture

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Rapture album cover
Album Information
  • Artist: Anita Baker (See All Albums by Anita Baker)
  • Date Released: May 20, 1986

  • Genre: Rock/Pop, Style: Pop

  • Label: Rhino Atlantic

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 36:18

eMusic Features

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It's that time of year again: Break out the candles, pick up the chocolates, turn the lights down low, and then, well, you know what to do. But before you do that thing that you do, make sure you have the perfect soundtrack for the perfect romantic evening. Can't find what you need? (Dave Matthews Band simply will not do on February 14.) Then we've got you covered with this simple guide. Now go forth,… more »

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Top Soul and R&B

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R&B is such an overwhelming genre. It lies at the heart of rock 'n 'roll and is somehow separate. It burns brighter, but can go dark. It shimmers and whinnies and roars. It's the sound of struggle and revolution, but also love and charity. Here is more than half a decade of an ever-changing and original American art form. Investigate for yourself. more »

They Say All Music Guide

Though Anita Baker got some airplay out of The Songstress, that promising solo debut didn’t bring her financial security. In fact, Baker was earning her living as a legal secretary in her native Detroit when she signed with Elektra in the mid-’80s. Elektra gave her a strong promotional push, and the equally superb Rapture became the megahit that The Songstress should have been. To its credit, Elektra made her a major star by focusing on Baker’s strong point — romantic but gospel-influenced R&B/pop ballads and “slow jams,” sometimes with jazz overtones — and letting her be true to herself. Rapture gave Baker one moving hit after another, including “Sweet Love,” “Caught up in the Rapture,” “Same Ole Love,” and “No One in This World.” Praising Baker in a 1986 interview, veteran R&B critic Steve Ivory asserted, “To me, singers like Anita Baker and Frankie Beverly define what R&B or soul music is all about.” Indeed, Rapture’s tremendous success made it clear that there was still a sizeable market for adult-oriented, more traditional R&B singing. – Alex Henderson

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