Abstract Emotions
Abstract Emotions | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1986 | |||
Genre | R&B, pop | |||
Label | Warner Bros. | |||
Producer | Reggie Lucas, Hawk Wolinski, James Newton Howard | |||
Randy Crawford chronology | ||||
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Abstract Emotions is the eighth studio album by American singer Randy Crawford, released in 1986 on Warner Bros. Records.[1] The album reached No. 14 on the UK Albums Chart and was certified Silver in the UK by the BPI.[2][3]
Critical reception
[edit]Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The Philadelphia Inquirer | ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Lennox Samuels of The Dallas Morning News called Abstract Emotions "a solid, sensual album of R&B-pop material ... the mostly mid- to up-tempo tunes give the LP an upbeat tone, though Crawford also does well with slower songs."[6] Ken Tucker of The Philadelphia Inquirer praised the album, saying that "Crawford sings a series of tart pop songs about love gone wrong that neatly avoids self-pity or facile despair."[5]
Ron Wynn of AllMusic noted that "Randy Crawford continued her run of good '80s albums ... with this 1986 release".[4]
Track listing
[edit]- Side one
- "Can't Stand the Pain" (Dean Gant, Mark Winkler) – 6:02
- "Actual Emotional Love" (Billie Hughes, Roxanne Seeman) – 5:05
- "World of Fools" (Rolf Graf, Alix Zandrs) – 5:00
- "Betcha" (Reggie Lucas, Leslie L. Smith) – 4:31
- "Higher Than Anyone Can Count" (Mary Unobsky, Daniel Ironstone) – 4:14
- Side two
- "Desire" (Reggie Lucas) – 5:25
- "Getting' Away With Murder" (Sue Shifrin, Terry Britten) – 4:02
- "Overnight" (Reggie Lucas) – 5:14
- "Almaz" (Randy Crawford) – 4:04
- "Don't Wanna be Normal" (Patrick Leonard, Hawk Wolinski, James Newton Howard, David Pack, Michael McDonald) – 5:20[1]
Personnel
[edit]- Randy Crawford – vocals
- "Sir" Dean Gant – keyboards (1–9), synthesizers (1–9), synthesizer programming (1–9)
- Ed Walsh – keyboards (1–9), synthesizers (1–9), synthesizer programming (1–9)
- Harry Whitaker – keyboards (1–9), synthesizers (1–9)
- Fred Zarr – keyboards (1–9), synthesizers (1–9)
- Reggie Lucas – Synclavier II programming (1–9), Octave-Plateau sequencer programming (1–9), guitars (1–9)
- James Newton Howard – keyboards (10), keyboard programming (10)
- Hawk Wolinski – keyboards (10), keyboard programming (10)
- Patrick Leonard – additional synthesizers (10)
- Paul Jackson Jr. – guitars (10)
- Anthony Jackson – electric bass guitar (1–9)
- Bashiri Johnson – percussion ( 1–9)
- Leslie Ming – percussion (1–9)
- Lisa Fischer – backing vocals (1–9)
- Curtis King – backing vocals (1–9)
- Yvonne Lewis – backing vocals (1–9)
- Brenda Wright King – backing vocals (1–9)
- Norma Jean Wright – backing vocals (1–9)
Production
[edit]- Reggie Lucas – producer (1–9), arrangements (1–9)
- James Newton Howard – producer (10)
- Hawk Wolinski – producer (10)
- Joe Ferla – engineer (1–9)
- Ray Blair – engineer (10)
- Peter Doell – mixing (10)
- Jim Dougherty – additional engineer (1–9)
- Jay Mark – additional engineer (1–9)
- Alan Silverman – additional engineer (1–9)
- Jeff Cox – assistant engineer (1–9)
- Craig Johnson – assistant engineer (1–9)
- Glenn Rosenstein – assistant engineer (1–9)
- Jimmy Santis – assistant engineer (1–9)
- Pietro Alifani – art direction, design
- Aaron Rapoport – photography
- Wendy Osmonden – make-up
Studios
- Recorded and mixed at Quantum Sound Studios (Jersey City, New Jersey).
- Additional recording at Giant Sound Studios and Sigma Sound Studios, (New York City, New York).
- Mastered at Direct Digital Mastering.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Randy Crawford (1986). Abstract Emotions (album). Warner Bros. Records.
- ^ "Randy Crawford". officialcharts.com. Official Charts. Retrieved 2014-07-17.
- ^ "Randy Crawford: Abstract Emotions". bpi.co.uk. BPI.
- ^ a b Wynn, Ron. "Abstract Emotions Randy Crawford". AllMusic.
- ^ a b Tucker, Ken (June 29, 1986). "JOHN PRINE ISSUES HIS 10TH RECORD". Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved April 8, 2025 – via newsbank.com.
- ^ Samuels, Lennox (August 17, 1986). "WINWOOD'S GROWING SOPHISTICATION DISPLAYED IN "BACK IN THE HIGH LIFE"". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved April 8, 2025 – via newsbank.com.