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Crayons
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Crayons
Crayons
20/5/2008

Crayons

  • Released: 20 May 2008 · Fecha Grabación: 2008 -
    Label: Burgundy · · Productor: Nathan DiGesare , Toby Gad , Jamie Houston , Greg Kurstin , Lester Mendez , Sebastian Arocha Morton , J. R. Rotem
    1
    Stamp Your Feet
    Donna Summer • w: Danielle Brisebois · Greg Kurstin · Donna Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:52
  • 2
    Mr. Music
    Donna Summer • w: Evan Bogart · J. R. Rotem · Donna Summer · Meredith Willson • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:14
  • 3
    Crayons (featuring Ziggy Marley)
    Donna Summer • w: Brisebois · Kurstin · Marley · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:21
  • 4
    The Queen Is Back
    Donna Summer • w: Bogart · Rotem · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:27
  • 5
    Fame (The Game)
    Donna Summer • w: Toby Gad · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    4:03
  • 6
    Sand on My Feet
    Donna Summer • w: Gad · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:51
  • 7
    Drivin` Down Brazil
    Donna Summer • w: Brisebois · Kurstin · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    4:43
  • 8
    I`m a Fire
    Donna Summer • w: Al Kasha · Sebastian Arocha Morton · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    7:11
  • 9
    Slide Over Backwards
    Donna Summer • w: Nathan DiGesare · Jakob Petren · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    4:10
  • 10
    Science of Love
    Donna Summer • w: Gad · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    3:48
  • 11
    Be Myself Again
    Donna Summer • w: Wayne Hector · Lester Mendez · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    4:19
  • 12
    Bring Down the Reign
    Donna Summer • w: Jamie Houston · Fred Kron · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 1
    4:33
  • 1
    It`s Only Love
    Donna Summer • w: Kasha · Morton · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 International edition bonus tr
    6:58
  • 1
    I`m a Fire (Matty Soulflower Club Mix)
    Donna Summer • w: Kasha · Morton · Summer • 2008 /05 /20 iTunes bonus track
    9:00
  • Singles


    No singles available

    Singles

    Crayons
    Crayons
    20/5/2008
    Crayons
    Studio album by
    ReleasedMay 20, 2008 (2008-5-20)
    Recorded2006–2008
    GenreDance-pop, R&B[1]
    Length50:18
    LabelBurgundy
    Producer
    Donna Summer chronology
    Gold
    (2005)
    Crayons
    (160)
    Love to Love You Donna
    (2013)
    Singles from Crayons
    1. "I`m a Fire"
      Released: March 11, 2008
    2. "Stamp Your Feet"
      Released: April 15, 2008
    3. "It`s Only Love"
      Released: August 5, 2008 (US)
    4. "Fame (The Game)"
      Released: November 19, 2008

    Review

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Leer más

    2008 studio album by Donna Summer

    Crayons is the seventeenth and final studio album by American singer Donna Summer. It was released through Sony Burgundy on May 20, 2008, in the United States. Recorded over a period of two years since signing with the Sony Music label in 2006, Crayons marked Summer`s first full-length studio album in fourteen years since 1994`s Christmas Spirit, and her first album of original material since 1991`s Mistaken Identity. She worked with a number of different producers and songwriters on the album, including Greg Kurstin, J. R. Rotem, Wayne Hector, Toby Gad, Lester Mendez.

    The album debuted and peaked at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 and entered the top fifty of the Italian Albums Chart. Crayons was preceded by its first official single, "Stamp Your Feet", which was released to radio on April 15, 2008. A follow-up, "I`m a Fire", reached number-one on the US Dance Club Songs, giving Summer her 13th number-one hit on that chart. Crayons marked Summer`s last album released before her death on May 17, 2012.

    Background

    Crayons marked Summer`s first full-length studio album in fourteen years since 1994`s Christmas Spirit. When commenting on the album, Summer explained, "I wanted this album to have a lot of different directions on it [...] I did not want it to be any one baby. I just wanted it to be a sampler of flavors and influences from all over the world. There`s a touch of this, a little smidgeon of that, a dash of something else [...] like when you`re cooking."[2] The lead track "Stamp Your Feet" was originally called "The Player`s Anthem" and talks about "being a player in life, coupled with the idea of being a player on an actual field, the whole thing, dealing with the pain and doing things even though you are afraid."[2]

    Summer wrote "The Queen Is Back" and "Mr. Music" with Jonathan "J.R." Rotem and Evan Bogart, whose father, Casablanca Records boss Neil Bogart, died from cancer at the age of 39.[2] When Summer met Evan Bogart, she was struck by his uncanny resemblance to his label executive father, commenting: "Evan and I hit it off immediately; there was a synergy that happened really quickly."[2] "The Queen is Back," which discusses her musical legacy and public persona, samples "Lose Control" by Kevin Federline. Both songs were produced by Rotem.[2] About the song "Crayons", Summer said, "It encompasses a lot of what the album is about [...] Everybody gets crayons at some point in their lives, everybody can relate to the basics. It comes down to that child in us, I think there`s a commonality in the concept of crayons."[2]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic66/100[3]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]
    BBC(favorable)[4]
    Billboard(positive)[5]
    Boston HeraldB[6]
    Canoe.ca[7]
    Digital Spy[8]
    The Guardian[9]
    Okayplayer(78/100)[10]
    Slant Magazine[11]

    At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Crayons has an average score of 66 based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[3] Billboard felt that "this surprisingly lively set finds the former disco diva teaming with a crew of young collaborators for a series of uptempo forays into stomping dance-pop, juke-joint blues-rock, breezy Latin jazz and African-accented soul."[5] Christian John Wikane from PopMatters wrote that "the core theme of Crayons is variety. It brazenly flaunts a collage of sounds, while showcasing the multiplicity of Donna Summer`s musical selves."[12] In his review for The Village Voice, Alfred Soto found that "on Crayons, it`s like no time has passed at all, and of course it hasn`t: As Lloyd Richards says to Margo Channing in All About Eve, the stars never die and never change."[13]

    Allmusic editor Andy Kellman found that Crayons "benefits from Summer`s effortless energy; she was clearly into making this album, and her voice is as able and flexible as ever. However, almost all of the material with which she has to work [...] would make more sense on an album by a female teen pop group from the UK or, in some cases, a young adult catering to the coffeehouse market [...] In-fashion vocal effects, which Summer certainly does not need, detract from a handful of these tracks, but as a whole, the album won`t have trouble pleasing fans who just want to hear their queen have a blast and tear it up."[1] Slant Magazine critic Eric Henderson wrote that the album was Summer`s "attempt to finally share, but the results are about as personal as food-dyed wax. The music is harmlessly listenable, and the requisite nods to her dance-floor legacy."[11]

    Commercial performance

    Crayons debuted and peaked at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 first-week sales of 23,000 units, marking Summer`s highest-charting album since her 1983 album She Works Hard for the Money.[14] By November 2008, it had moved 69,000 copies in the United States.[15]

    Track listing

    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    1."Stamp Your Feet"
    • Danielle Brisebois
    • Greg Kurstin
    • Donna Summer
    Kurstin3:52
    2."Mr. Music"
    • Evan Bogart
    • J. R. Rotem
    • Donna Summer
    • Meredith Willson
    Rotem3:14
    3."Crayons" (featuring Ziggy Marley)
    • Brisebois
    • Kurstin
    • Marley
    • Summer
    Kurstin3:21
    4."The Queen Is Back"
    • Bogart
    • Rotem
    • Summer
    Rotem3:27
    5."Fame (The Game)"
    • Toby Gad
    • Summer
    Gad4:03
    6."Sand on My Feet"
    • Gad
    • Summer
    Gad3:51
    7."Drivin` Down Brazil"
    • Brisebois
    • Kurstin
    • Summer
    Kurstin4:43
    8."I`m a Fire"
    • Al Kasha
    • Sebastian Arocha Morton
    • Summer
    Morton7:11
    9."Slide Over Backwards"
    • Nathan DiGesare
    • Jakob Petren
    • Summer
    DiGesare4:10
    10."Science of Love"
    • Gad
    • Summer
    Gad3:48
    11."Be Myself Again"
    • Wayne Hector
    • Lester Mendez
    • Summer
    Mendez4:19
    12."Bring Down the Reign"
    • Jamie Houston
    • Fred Kron
    • Summer
    Houston4:33

    International edition bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)ProducerLength
    13."It`s Only Love"
    • Kasha
    • Morton
    • Summer
    Morton6:58

    iTunes bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)ProducerLength
    14."I`m a Fire" (Matty Soulflower Club Mix)
    • Kasha
    • Morton
    • Summer
    Morton9:00

    Charts

    Chart (2008)

    Peak
    position

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[16]

    77

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[17]

    73

    Italian Albums (FIMI)[18]

    42

    Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[19]

    97

    Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[20]

    85

    UK R&B Albums (OCC)[21]

    24

    US Billboard 200[22]

    17

    US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[23]

    5

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Russia (NFPF)[24]

    Gold

    10,000*

    * Sales figures based on certification alone.

    Release history

    List of release dates, showing region, formats, and label

    Region

    Date

    Format(s)

    Label

    United States

    May 20, 2008

    • CD
    • digital download

    Burgundy Records

    Canada

    Denmark

    May 26, 2008

    Germany

    June 6, 2008

    Australia[25]

    June 7, 2008

    France

    June 9, 2008

    Spain

    June 10, 2008

    Brazil

    June 16, 2008

    United Kingdom

    June 23, 2008

    Japan

    June 25, 2008

    Europe[26]

    Jan. 13, 2023

    vinyl

    Sony Music

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    2008 studio album by Donna Summer

    Crayons is the seventeenth and final studio album by American singer Donna Summer. It was released through Sony Burgundy on May 20, 2008, in the United States. Recorded over a period of two years since signing with the Sony Music label in 2006, Crayons marked Summer`s first full-length studio album in fourteen years since 1994`s Christmas Spirit, and her first album of original material since 1991`s Mistaken Identity. She worked with a number of different producers and songwriters on the album, including Greg Kurstin, J. R. Rotem, Wayne Hector, Toby Gad, Lester Mendez.

    The album debuted and peaked at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 and entered the top fifty of the Italian Albums Chart. Crayons was preceded by its first official single, "Stamp Your Feet", which was released to radio on April 15, 2008. A follow-up, "I`m a Fire", reached number-one on the US Dance Club Songs, giving Summer her 13th number-one hit on that chart. Crayons marked Summer`s last album released before her death on May 17, 2012.

    Background

    Crayons marked Summer`s first full-length studio album in fourteen years since 1994`s Christmas Spirit. When commenting on the album, Summer explained, "I wanted this album to have a lot of different directions on it [...] I did not want it to be any one baby. I just wanted it to be a sampler of flavors and influences from all over the world. There`s a touch of this, a little smidgeon of that, a dash of something else [...] like when you`re cooking."[2] The lead track "Stamp Your Feet" was originally called "The Player`s Anthem" and talks about "being a player in life, coupled with the idea of being a player on an actual field, the whole thing, dealing with the pain and doing things even though you are afraid."[2]

    Summer wrote "The Queen Is Back" and "Mr. Music" with Jonathan "J.R." Rotem and Evan Bogart, whose father, Casablanca Records boss Neil Bogart, died from cancer at the age of 39.[2] When Summer met Evan Bogart, she was struck by his uncanny resemblance to his label executive father, commenting: "Evan and I hit it off immediately; there was a synergy that happened really quickly."[2] "The Queen is Back," which discusses her musical legacy and public persona, samples "Lose Control" by Kevin Federline. Both songs were produced by Rotem.[2] About the song "Crayons", Summer said, "It encompasses a lot of what the album is about [...] Everybody gets crayons at some point in their lives, everybody can relate to the basics. It comes down to that child in us, I think there`s a commonality in the concept of crayons."[2]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic66/100[3]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[1]
    BBC(favorable)[4]
    Billboard(positive)[5]
    Boston HeraldB[6]
    Canoe.ca[7]
    Digital Spy[8]
    The Guardian[9]
    Okayplayer(78/100)[10]
    Slant Magazine[11]

    At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Crayons has an average score of 66 based on 12 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[3] Billboard felt that "this surprisingly lively set finds the former disco diva teaming with a crew of young collaborators for a series of uptempo forays into stomping dance-pop, juke-joint blues-rock, breezy Latin jazz and African-accented soul."[5] Christian John Wikane from PopMatters wrote that "the core theme of Crayons is variety. It brazenly flaunts a collage of sounds, while showcasing the multiplicity of Donna Summer`s musical selves."[12] In his review for The Village Voice, Alfred Soto found that "on Crayons, it`s like no time has passed at all, and of course it hasn`t: As Lloyd Richards says to Margo Channing in All About Eve, the stars never die and never change."[13]

    Allmusic editor Andy Kellman found that Crayons "benefits from Summer`s effortless energy; she was clearly into making this album, and her voice is as able and flexible as ever. However, almost all of the material with which she has to work [...] would make more sense on an album by a female teen pop group from the UK or, in some cases, a young adult catering to the coffeehouse market [...] In-fashion vocal effects, which Summer certainly does not need, detract from a handful of these tracks, but as a whole, the album won`t have trouble pleasing fans who just want to hear their queen have a blast and tear it up."[1] Slant Magazine critic Eric Henderson wrote that the album was Summer`s "attempt to finally share, but the results are about as personal as food-dyed wax. The music is harmlessly listenable, and the requisite nods to her dance-floor legacy."[11]

    Commercial performance

    Crayons debuted and peaked at number 17 on the US Billboard 200 first-week sales of 23,000 units, marking Summer`s highest-charting album since her 1983 album She Works Hard for the Money.[14] By November 2008, it had moved 69,000 copies in the United States.[15]

    Track listing

    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    1."Stamp Your Feet"
    • Danielle Brisebois
    • Greg Kurstin
    • Donna Summer
    Kurstin3:52
    2."Mr. Music"
    • Evan Bogart
    • J. R. Rotem
    • Donna Summer
    • Meredith Willson
    Rotem3:14
    3."Crayons" (featuring Ziggy Marley)
    • Brisebois
    • Kurstin
    • Marley
    • Summer
    Kurstin3:21
    4."The Queen Is Back"
    • Bogart
    • Rotem
    • Summer
    Rotem3:27
    5."Fame (The Game)"
    • Toby Gad
    • Summer
    Gad4:03
    6."Sand on My Feet"
    • Gad
    • Summer
    Gad3:51
    7."Drivin` Down Brazil"
    • Brisebois
    • Kurstin
    • Summer
    Kurstin4:43
    8."I`m a Fire"
    • Al Kasha
    • Sebastian Arocha Morton
    • Summer
    Morton7:11
    9."Slide Over Backwards"
    • Nathan DiGesare
    • Jakob Petren
    • Summer
    DiGesare4:10
    10."Science of Love"
    • Gad
    • Summer
    Gad3:48
    11."Be Myself Again"
    • Wayne Hector
    • Lester Mendez
    • Summer
    Mendez4:19
    12."Bring Down the Reign"
    • Jamie Houston
    • Fred Kron
    • Summer
    Houston4:33

    International edition bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)ProducerLength
    13."It`s Only Love"
    • Kasha
    • Morton
    • Summer
    Morton6:58

    iTunes bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)ProducerLength
    14."I`m a Fire" (Matty Soulflower Club Mix)
    • Kasha
    • Morton
    • Summer
    Morton9:00

    Charts

    Chart (2008)

    Peak
    position

    Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[16]

    77

    German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[17]

    73

    Italian Albums (FIMI)[18]

    42

    Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[19]

    97

    Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[20]

    85

    UK R&B Albums (OCC)[21]

    24

    US Billboard 200[22]

    17

    US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[23]

    5

    Certifications

    Region

    CertificationCertified units/sales

    Russia (NFPF)[24]

    Gold

    10,000*

    * Sales figures based on certification alone.

    Release history

    List of release dates, showing region, formats, and label

    Region

    Date

    Format(s)

    Label

    United States

    May 20, 2008

    • CD
    • digital download

    Burgundy Records

    Canada

    Denmark

    May 26, 2008

    Germany

    June 6, 2008

    Australia[25]

    June 7, 2008

    France

    June 9, 2008

    Spain

    June 10, 2008

    Brazil

    June 16, 2008

    United Kingdom

    June 23, 2008

    Japan

    June 25, 2008

    Europe[26]

    Jan. 13, 2023

    vinyl

    Sony Music

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