Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Joan Armatrading|Lovers Speak

Lovers Speak

Joan Armatrading

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

When an artist releases something as profoundly moving as Lovers Speak, critical acumen doesn't mean a damned thing. Joan Armatrading's first album proper in five years is a startling testament of artistic integrity, searing emotional honesty, and musical accessibility and sophistication that is literally unmatched by anything on the current musical scene. In fact, the only comparable album from 2003 is Annie Lennox's Bare. But where the latter is an album of confessions and exorcism, Lovers Speak is an unflinching look at the language of love from all sides. It is an investigation into the experience of love, its languishing and loss, and the redemption it is capable of rewarding to those who persevere and refine themselves through heartache and acceptance and tolerance. For starters, Armatrading, who has been known to consort with producers like Steve Lillywhite and experiment with song forms radically, decided to bear the weight of her own production in the chair and on the floor: she arranged and played everything herself. It's as if the emotional and physical and spiritual states explored here are so personal, so full of instruction and transcendence for the artist, that she had to carry them all upon her back as they flowed from her pen, hands, and heart, giving them utterance in the grain of her voice.
The title track speaks of the symbolic and actual language of love as if it is a series of mysteries that can only be translated and exchanged among those who participate. "Physical Pain" is a ballad that assumes the consequences for telling lies in the space of love. One can easily picture Peter Gabriel recording this for the Us album. The asymmetrical polyrhythms in Armatrading's guitar playing propel a piano and organic percussion into an anthem that offers the truth of instant karma. "In These Times" is the darker side of John Lennon's "Imagine"; it is just as spare, with piano, bass, and strings accompanying the ache in Armatrading's lyrics and delivery. It is easy to imagine Gabriel recording this song as well. "Waiting" is the most desperate folk song ever written about being the one left, all night alone, while the beloved is adrift in the sea of night. The dawn comes cold, slow, and gray, turning the protagonist from the angry to the worried to the lovesick. "Prove Yourself" is almost a country-rocker, and is the only sensible update to Bob Dylan's "Forever Young." The album goes on like this for 14 tracks, turning over and in on itself with gorgeous pop, folk, and jazz forms, interstitially lacing, crisscrossing, and blending as the emotions so contradictory and tempestuous assuage, confront, and caress one another. But as the album closes with "Blessed," the underlying theme is the gratitude to feel at all in a time when emotion is snuffed out in favor of production, loss, grief, and rage; the simple fact that one is breathing and able to experience what is placed in the path is reason enough to live, and yes, to continue to try to love once more. Lovers Speak, in all its eclectic, musical, and lyrical diversity, is poetry of function and form -- a masterpiece that belongs at the very top of her shelf and should be a contender for pop album of 2003.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

More info

Lovers Speak

Joan Armatrading

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Lovers Speak
00:05:54

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

2
Physical Pain
00:03:27

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

3
In These Times
00:03:17

Joan Armatrading, Composer, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

4
Waiting
00:02:53

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

5
Prove Your Self
00:03:35

Joan Armatrading, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

6
Fire and Ice
00:03:31

Joan Armatrading, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

7
Love Bug
00:03:22

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

8
Let's Talk About Us
00:04:01

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

9
Ocean
00:03:33

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

10
Tender Trap
00:04:11

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

11
Less Happy More Often
00:03:56

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

12
Crazy For You
00:04:10

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

13
You Made Your Bed
00:03:56

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2003 Savoy Label Group, LLC.

14
Blessed
00:01:45

Joan Armatrading, Arranger, Writer, MainArtist

© 2003 Giftwend Limited under exclusive licence to BMG Rights Management (UK) Limited ℗ 2004 SLG LLC

Albumbeschreibung

When an artist releases something as profoundly moving as Lovers Speak, critical acumen doesn't mean a damned thing. Joan Armatrading's first album proper in five years is a startling testament of artistic integrity, searing emotional honesty, and musical accessibility and sophistication that is literally unmatched by anything on the current musical scene. In fact, the only comparable album from 2003 is Annie Lennox's Bare. But where the latter is an album of confessions and exorcism, Lovers Speak is an unflinching look at the language of love from all sides. It is an investigation into the experience of love, its languishing and loss, and the redemption it is capable of rewarding to those who persevere and refine themselves through heartache and acceptance and tolerance. For starters, Armatrading, who has been known to consort with producers like Steve Lillywhite and experiment with song forms radically, decided to bear the weight of her own production in the chair and on the floor: she arranged and played everything herself. It's as if the emotional and physical and spiritual states explored here are so personal, so full of instruction and transcendence for the artist, that she had to carry them all upon her back as they flowed from her pen, hands, and heart, giving them utterance in the grain of her voice.
The title track speaks of the symbolic and actual language of love as if it is a series of mysteries that can only be translated and exchanged among those who participate. "Physical Pain" is a ballad that assumes the consequences for telling lies in the space of love. One can easily picture Peter Gabriel recording this for the Us album. The asymmetrical polyrhythms in Armatrading's guitar playing propel a piano and organic percussion into an anthem that offers the truth of instant karma. "In These Times" is the darker side of John Lennon's "Imagine"; it is just as spare, with piano, bass, and strings accompanying the ache in Armatrading's lyrics and delivery. It is easy to imagine Gabriel recording this song as well. "Waiting" is the most desperate folk song ever written about being the one left, all night alone, while the beloved is adrift in the sea of night. The dawn comes cold, slow, and gray, turning the protagonist from the angry to the worried to the lovesick. "Prove Yourself" is almost a country-rocker, and is the only sensible update to Bob Dylan's "Forever Young." The album goes on like this for 14 tracks, turning over and in on itself with gorgeous pop, folk, and jazz forms, interstitially lacing, crisscrossing, and blending as the emotions so contradictory and tempestuous assuage, confront, and caress one another. But as the album closes with "Blessed," the underlying theme is the gratitude to feel at all in a time when emotion is snuffed out in favor of production, loss, grief, and rage; the simple fact that one is breathing and able to experience what is placed in the path is reason enough to live, and yes, to continue to try to love once more. Lovers Speak, in all its eclectic, musical, and lyrical diversity, is poetry of function and form -- a masterpiece that belongs at the very top of her shelf and should be a contender for pop album of 2003.

© Thom Jurek /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

The Studio Albums 2009 – 2018

Mark Knopfler

Money For Nothing

Dire Straits

Money For Nothing Dire Straits

Tutu

Miles Davis

Tutu Miles Davis

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Joan Armatrading

Me Myself I

Joan Armatrading

Me Myself I Joan Armatrading

Joan Armatrading

Joan Armatrading

Joan Armatrading Joan Armatrading

Consequences

Joan Armatrading

Consequences Joan Armatrading

Joan Armatrading - Live at Asylum Chapel

Joan Armatrading

Show Some Emotion

Joan Armatrading

Show Some Emotion Joan Armatrading
You may also like...

One Deep River

Mark Knopfler

One Deep River Mark Knopfler

i/o

Peter Gabriel

i/o Peter Gabriel

Rumours

Fleetwood Mac

Rumours Fleetwood Mac

Now And Then

The Beatles

Now And Then The Beatles

Dark Matter

Pearl Jam

Dark Matter Pearl Jam