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Rebecca Ferguson - Superwoman (2016)

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Rebecca Ferguson - Superwoman (2016)

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1 	Bones 	3:49
2 	Mistress 	3:19
3 	Hold Me 	4:28
4 	Superwoman 	3:34
5 	Stars 	3:03
6 	The Way You're Looking At Her 	4:10
7 	Pay For It 	3:16
8 	Oceans 	3:22
9 	Don't Want You Back 	3:14
10 	Without A Woman 	4:20
11 	Waiting For Me 	3:50
12 	I'll Meet You There 	3:28

Rebecca Ferguson 	Primary Artist, Violin, Vocals
Rebekah Allen 	Violin
Xantone Blacq 	Vocals (Background)
Phil Cook 	Keyboards, Programming
Alex Davis 	Bass
James Douglas 	Cello
Ben Epstein 	Bass 
Wendi Harriott 	Vocals (Background)
Sharlene Hector 	Vocals (Background)
Scott McKeon 	Guitar, Guitar (Acoustic)
Troy Miller 	Bass, Drums, Guitars, Hammond B3, Keyboards, Percussion, Piano, Programming, Synthesizer
Rob Murllarkey 	Bass, Viola
Harriet Murray 	Violin
Matt Prime 	Guitar, Piano
Sewuese 	Vocals (Background)
Rob Spriggs 	Viola
Carl Stanbridge 	Bass 

 

The fourth studio album from Britain's Rebecca Ferguson, 2016's Superwoman is a hooky, sophisticated production worthy of her immense talent. Blessed with an earthy, soulful wallop of a voice, Ferguson rose from modest beginnings in Liverpool as the daughter of Jamaican immigrants and a teen mom to acclaim as the runner-up on the British version of The X Factor in 2010. Since then, she's released three well-received albums, including her impressive 2015 Billie Holiday tribute, Lady Sings the Blues, which showcased her knack for interpreting jazz standards. She's also had her share of public struggles, including the difficulties of being a single working mom, dealing with depression, and suffering the emotional fallout from several failed relationships -- including a 2014 romance that ended while she was pregnant with her third child. One gets the sense that Ferguson pours all of her feelings and experiences into her work, and Superwoman is no exception. Collaborating with a handful of in-demand writer/producers including Troy Miller (Laura Mvula, Zara McFarlane, Mika Urbaniak), Phil Cook (Ellie Goulding, Josh Osho, Kylie Minogue), and Matt Prime (Sam Smith, CeeLo Green, Olly Murs), Ferguson has crafted an album that balances R&B bravado and Motown-esque grooves with a folky, '70s-style melodicism. It's a vibrant, tactile combination that brings to mind favorable comparisons to similarly inclined contemporaries like Amos Lee, Ben Harper, and Adele. Cuts like "Mistress," "Stars," and "Don't Want You Back" are exuberant anthems, rife with messages of hard-won female empowerment and strength in the face of romantic and societal odds. It's a vibe she carries over with tender poignancy and fierce resoluteness on several acoustic guitar and piano-led ballads, including "Hold Me" and the yearning, folk-soul-tinged "The Way You're Looking at Her." However, it's the robust, cathartic title track, with its gigantic, sing-to-the-heavens chorus, that exemplifies the album's message of personal fortitude. She sings "And maybe I'm mad/And maybe I'm all cried out/Maybe I'm scared/But I'm comin' round." With Superwoman, Ferguson isn't just coming around, she's arrived. ---Matt Collar, AllMusic Review

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