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Where Does This Door Go

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (18 ratings)
Where Does This Door Go album cover
01
Problematization
0:15
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02
Back Seat Lover
3:52
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03
The Innocent
3:23
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04
Allie Jones
4:04
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05
The Only One
3:20
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06
Wine Glass Woman
3:48
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07
Her Favorite Song
3:29
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08
Ay Bass Player
0:14
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09
Crime
4:40
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10
Reach Out Richard
4:08
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11
Corsican Rosé
4:09
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12
Where Does This Door Go
4:18
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13
Robot Love
3:27
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14
The Stars Are Ours
4:28
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15
All Better
4:20
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 51:55

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eMusic Review 1

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Barry Walters

eMusic Contributor

Award-winning critic Barry Walters is a longtime contributor to Rolling Stone, Spin, the Village Voice, and many other publications. His interview with Prince a...more »

07.16.13
The cheeky guy gets a bit more serious on his third album
2013 | Label: Republic Records

Mayer Hawthorne doesn’t insist you take him seriously. He shoots deliberately goofy videos. His vibe is playful, not tortured and belabored. Yet his records rank among the most detailed and precise of today’s vintage soul practitioners, even if the results favor pure entertainment over profound enlightenment.

On his third album, the cheeky guy gets a bit more serious. Teaming with Pharrell Williams, Anthony Hamilton/Cee-Lo Green producer Jack Splash, Mika/Katy Perry collaborator Greg Wells and other hit-makers, he broadens his palate beyond the blueprints of the past, mixing, matching and updating styles rather than the straightforward Motown and Philly soul mimicry of his initial records. Now he alludes to Steely Dan, Frank Ocean, Hall & Oates and Pharrell himself, particularly on the Williams-produced cuts “Wine Glass Woman” “Reach Out Richard,” and “The Stars Are Ours.”

Having spent the past few years constantly touring and recording, Hawthorne sings more confidently while also doing a better job of masking his vocal limitations. Multi-tracking and other production tricks haven’t turned him into Marvin Gaye, but they help him get Doobie-smooth on “Back Seat Lover.” And although that opening song picks up where earlier cocky cuts like “Just Ain’t Gonna Work Out” left off, much of what… read more »

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His Best Work So Far

chris_gonzales

This is an outstanding piece of work by Mayer Hawthorne. His best yet. I highly recommend it. Allie Jones, Crime, Where Does This Door Go, and Her Favorite Song will be on your playlist forever.

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