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Soul | 
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| Artist: Seal Label: Warner Bros. Category: Music
List Price: $18.98 Buy New: $8.49 You Save: $10.49 (55%)
New (43) Used (10) from $8.49
Rating: 87 reviews Sales Rank: 11
Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 515868 UPC: 093624982463 EAN: 0093624982463 ASIN: B001F290E4
Release Date: November 11, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Tracks:
| • | A Change Is Gonna Come | | • | I Can't Stand The Rain | | • | It's A Man's Man's Man's World | | • | Here I Am (Come And Take Me) | | • | I've Been Loving You Too Long | | • | It's Alright | | • | If You Don't Know Me By Now | | • | Knock On Wood | | • | I'm Still In Love With You | | • | Free | | • | Stand By Me | | • | People Get Ready |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com (Amazon.co.uk Review) emSoul/em is a confusing beast. We know Seal has a great voice and can easily imagine him being covering golden oldies with aplomb. Yet this collection of soul favourites is frustratingly patchy. Opener "A Change Is Gonna Come" is impassioned and beautifully arranged (the album is helmed by David Foster of emCelebrity Duets/em fame, who has made sure it sounds fresh and compelling), and even though it could never compare to Sam Cooke's original, it's ultimately a successful reworking. Seal applies his sandpapery tones to James Brown's "It's a Man's Man's Man's World", Al Green's ldquo;Here I Am" and ldquo;I'm Still in Love With You", and Ben E King's ldquo;Stand By Me"--all of them with decent results. Decent, yet hardly overwhelming. And here's where the confusion kicks in: Why cover a bunch of songs that have already been done to death? Christmas being right around the corner is perhaps one good reason in commercial terms. But when you listen to the singer transform less well-trodden territory like Deniece Williams' ldquo;Free" or Ann Peeble's ldquo;I Can't Stand the Rain", it's hard not to feel this play-it-safe option--while undoubtedly a wonderful Xmas gift--is also a lost creative opportunity. em--Danny McKenna/em
Product Description A great voice singing great songs recorded by a great producer. That is 'Soul', the sixth studio album from multiplatinum selling, Grammy-winning, critically acclaimed Seal. Each song is a stone-cold soul classic, from Sam Cooke's 'A Change Is Gonna Come', Ben E. King's 'Stand By Me', and Ann Pebbles' 'I Can't Stand The Rain' to Harold Melvin And The Blue Notes' 'If You Don't Know Me By Now' and Otis Redding's 'I've Been Loving You Too Long'. Produced by David Foster, 'Soul' is the perfect coming together of man, material and moment.
Album Description Grammy-winning vocalist and songwriter Seal will release a new album, SOUL and it is the best-selling artist's sixth studio album and was created in partnership with legendary producer David Foster. SOUL is comprised of eleven classic soul songs that each evokes their own drama, emotion and romance. Seal brings his unique, signature style to the album and found a great collaborative spirit working with Foster. The London-born singer first emerged from Britain's house music scene in the early '90s providing vocals and lyrics for techno artist Adamski's 1990 hit "Killer." The Top Ten debut single, "Crazy," followed and Seal would go on to earn critical acclaim and worldwide commercial success over four albums. Seal's prodigious vocal gifts - his soaring, husky baritone that has become a signature on such hits as "Prayer for the Dying," "Kiss From a Rose," and "Don't Cry" - amplify the emotion he brings to a song.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 82 more reviews...
Classics sung by a "classic" January 8, 2009 Listening to the classic songs such as "A change is gonna come" and "I can't stand the rain" sung by Seal is such an amazing experience. I think in the back of our minds we have always wondered what he would sound like performing some of these songs and now we have it! Would have been nice for him to throw in one or two new originals. All in all a great CD to curl up with your favorite loved one and enjoy each other's company ; - )
Lovely, caring, technically advanced covers of classic soul songs January 7, 2009 At the beginning of his classic track "Killer," Seal says, "It's the loneliness that's the killer." And maybe that's just it: after you marry a supermodel and get her to duet with you on your CD ("Wedding Day" on System, 2007), even if it's quite a good song, the critics just don't take you seriously anymore, nevermind what you try next.br /br /Witness the tepid critical reception of what Seal tried next, Soul. The record is an hommage to classic soul music - it boldly and unashamedly soldiers through the well-known territory of "A Change is Gonna Come," "Stand by Me" and "People Get Ready." To make things even more complicated for the critics, it's produced by David Foster. Here are some excerpts from the web:br /br / "Is this album really necessary? Well, life is really no better or worse after listening to Soul. It's a rather innocuous collection." (From Popmatters)br /br / "The problem with most of these songbook albums - Soul included - is that in choosing such memorable tunes, Seal inevitably invites comparisons to originals few can hope to transcend. Unless you do something radically different-see Cat Powers' inventive Jukebox (Matador) from last winter-you risk sounding like a sub-par imitation." (From VIBE)br /br / "But the songs he has chosen [...] have been reinterpreted so many thousands of times, he'd have to reinvent them to get anyone to pay attention, and the only thing new that Seal brings to the party is a feeling of swank Euro-sophistication that saps the music of much of its emotional oomph. Soul is an unnecessary record." (From Rolling Stone)br /br /In a way, this is what a modern music critic would have to say, of course. We've been conditioned to expect that covers - at the very least - have to be unusual to pay them any attention. And covers sung by an artist whose prime, supposedly, is behind him... well, that's borderline unforgivable!br /br /The truth, of course, is much different. This is a very beautiful record. The overall sound is nothing short of remarkable - this is studio perfection without being dull, full of everything Pro Tools has to offer, but completely 'straight up': unlike, say, Amy Winehouse's Back to Black, which deliberately shows its hip hop production values and thus overlays its glistening sheen with some `old school' grit, Soul uses the entire arsenal of digital music making in the interest of sounding realistic. Of course, it's not true: while there undoubtedly many musicians here playing real instruments, there are - probably - as many virtual instruments. The amazing thing is, it sounds real, even though you know it can't be, at least not completely. It's like that moment in animated movies - Shrek, maybe, or Monsters Inc., when you noticed, "They can animate individual hairs now. Wow."br /br /Seal's vocals are superb throughout. He's an excellent soul singer, in the same way that Annie Lennox is, for example. There's a very slight artifice in his interpretation of these songs - correctly identified in the quote from Rolling Stone - that I think is due to his non-American roots. He's not Sam Cooke, but then, nobody is.br /br /I think the key to refuting the critical consensus here is to say that these songs deserve to be sung. Sung in ways that don't make travesties of the original, classic arrangements by insisting on reinterpreting them for the umpteenth time. Jazz has an expectation where great singers must put their own spin, their own personal take on a song. Pop doesn't have the same paradigm, or at least not in exactly the same way. It's been quite acceptable to produce loving, detailed versions of songs that are, in some essential way, the same as the original. Sometimes, surprisingly, the constraints of performing a song using the same arrangement as the original has brought out something decidedly great. Listen, for example, to the Neville Brothers' version of "A Change is Gonna Come." Daniel Lanois' sleepy arrangement can hardly be called a new interpretation - all it does is strip away some of Cooke's strings and replaces them with more guitars and synth pads. Yet Aaron's voice makes it into a very different song.br /br /Now, I'm not suggesting that Seal achieves quite the same heights of expressiveness in his version. But it's more than merely respectable - it's a very good version. And his "It's Alright" is amazing, as are "Here I Am (Come and Take Me)" and "People Get Ready," which comes across as truly heartfelt rendition that has something new to say.br /br /I think, it's enough - no more than enough: amazing - to hear a great voice perform emotionally accurate, heartfelt, inspired renditions of great material. If it's tastefully produced by one of the industry's leading lights, that's a bonus. Since classic RB essentially ceased to exist as an alive genre in the 1970s, any `new' releases in this mode have been aimed at a rock audience and had more rock `grit' than is organic to the form. Seal's Soul simply restores the strings, horns and background vocals to their rightful place.br /br /I'm going to take a contrarian position: I recommend this.
Best CD 2008 January 7, 2009 I love this CD. What an unexpected suprise. I bought it because I like his version of the Change. I could only think brilliant by the end of the last tract and I have been playing this in my care everyday for the last monthbr /br /This CD may be made up of cover versions but Seals voice is certainly original
soul January 7, 2009 if you love soul you will fall in love with this cd. i love every song. he puts his heart and soul in every song. you will have to set and listen to this. it is great. if you are a 50's person this is a cd for you. if you love soul music this is a must. it just hits your heart.
This CD is so uniquely great! January 6, 2009 I really love this CD. The more I listen the more I like it. It runs the range of blues to RB and even a little gospel, and Seal does it all with a unique soulful style. I gave this CD to two music-loving men I know for Christmas and they both love it.
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