Rachelle Ferrell

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Rachelle Ferrell album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 65:26

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This album by her name

EMUSIC-02A16622

Add this artist to your list of the very best at r and b, smooth jazz or soul. She has got it and with this album by her own name and her newest release, "individuality", she is at the very top of my list of extraordinary artists. Her gifted heaven blessed, heart warming, love affirming songs and music is unique and a joy to all music and people lovers. Check her out, your heart, soul and ear will be truly thankful.

user avatar

This album by her name

EMUSIC-02A16622

Add this artist to your list of the very best at r and b, smooth jazz or soul. She has got it and with this album by her own name and her newest release, "individuality", she is at the very top of my list of extraordinary artists. Her gifted heaven blessed, heart warming, love affirming songs and music is unique and a joy to all music and people lovers. Check her out, your heart, soul and ear will be truly thankful.

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Excellent

ifabowale

I love the unseen in you made seen .

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They Say All Music Guide

Rachelle Ferrell wore two hats in the 1990s: straight-ahead jazz singer and commercial R&B/pop singer along the lines of Anita Baker, Miki Howard, and Angela Bofill. Produced mostly by George Duke, this self-titled album is an example of her R&B/pop side. With this smooth, classy effort, Manhattan/Capitol was obviously intent on appealing to the more adult-oriented tastes in the urban contemporary market. While artists like Mary J. Blige, Bell Biv DeVoe, Babyface, and Janet Jackson were making R&B relevant to hip-hoppers, Ferrell opted for maximum quiet storm appeal with this album. If you were buying a lot of Baker, Luther Vandross, and Freddie Jackson albums in the early ’90s (along with some Grover Washington, Jr. and Joe Sample, perhaps), you were exactly the type of listener Manhattan/Capitol had in mind with sophisticated numbers like “It Only Took a Minute,” “‘Til You Come Back to Me,” and “Sentimental.” Most of the songs are appropriate vehicles for the Philadelphian’s big, rich voice, but while this collection of mood music isn’t bad, it isn’t the gem that Ferrell had the ability to deliver. As pleasant and likable as much of the material is, one got the impression that she was capable of a lot more. – Alex Henderson

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