Mandy Moore (album)

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Mandy Moore
Emilio Estefan, Jr.
  • Pablo Flores
  • Javier Garza
  • Gioia & Sheppard
  • Matthew Hager
  • Tim Mitchell
  • Peter Mokran
  • George Noriega
  • Anne Preven
  • James Renald
  • David Rice
  • Ken Ross
  • Jon Secada
  • Nick Trevesick
  • David McPherson (executive)
  • Mandy Moore chronology
    I Wanna Be with You
    (2000)
    Mandy Moore
    (2001)
    Coverage
    (2003)
    Singles from Mandy Moore
    1. "In My Pocket"
      Released: May 1, 2001
    2. "Crush"
      Released: September 17, 2001
    3. "Cry"
      Released: November 4, 2001

    Mandy Moore is the second studio album by American singer Mandy Moore. It was released by Epic Records on June 19, 2001. Moore began taking more creative control of her music with the album, transitioning from the teen pop styles from her debut studio album, So Real (1999). The album includes elements of dance, R&B, pop rock, hip hop and Middle Eastern music.

    Background

    Over one year following the release of So Real (1999), Moore became very displeased with her early music, saying "All of the music has started to look and sound the same"[1] and that she decided that it was time for her to move away from that. She expressed a desire to perform with more live instruments, saying in a Billboard interview that she wanted "no more dancers, no more singing to tracks. I got tired of that in a big way".[2]

    The album was a departure in sound for Moore. The opening track "In My Pocket" is a dance-pop song mixed with techno and R&B beats with a Middle Eastern sound. Moore co-wrote the final track on the album, "When I Talk to You". The song was written with Matthew Hager, who produced it. Moore said that the song was written while her and Hager were waiting to do a soundcheck.[3] It was also the first song co-written by Moore that was included on one of her albums.

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Aggregate scores
    SourceRating
    Metacritic56/100[4]
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[5]
    Entertainment WeeklyB-
    Rolling Stone[6]
    Slant Magazine[7]

    The album scored 56 out of 100 at review aggregator Metacritic, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[4]

    AllMusic gave the album a very positive review, saying, "Mandy Moore manages to pack more hooks, melody, beats, clever production flourishes, and fun into its 13 tracks than nearly all of its peers – remarkably, it's a stronger album, through and through, than either of Britney's first two albums or Christina's record..immaculately crafted, precisely polished, & exactly what a teen pop album should be."[5]

    Entertainment Weekly gave the album a mostly positive review and a B−, saying that Moore "tries out new sounds -- Eastern rhythms, jangly percussives -- that help separate her from the pack. Best of all, she spares us 'Look at Me!' vocal gyrations in favor of a breathy Natalie Imbruglia vibe. [...] [A]s teen pop goes, it could be a lot worse."[8]

    Rolling Stone also gave the album a positive review, saying, "It's so rare and refreshing when a teen star takes the high road...[Mandy's] CD offers the most startlingly liberated teen pop since Eighties mall-rat icon Tiffany euphemistically declared herself 'New Inside'."[6]

    Slant Magazine also gave the album a positive review, saying, "Mandy Moore is a refreshingly modest pop/rock excursion that gives Moore the opportunity to differentiate herself from the competition and further solidifies a promising musical future." It was given an honorable mention in the magazine's top music picks of 2001.[7]

    The album was chosen as one of Amazon.com's Best of 2001.

    Commercial performance

    The album debuted at number 35 on the US Billboard 200. The album was

    Top 40 Mainstream chart in the US, including "In My Pocket", "Crush", "Cry" and "17" was released in Asia, but none reached the Billboard Hot 100. The album had sold 462,000 copies in the U.S., according to Nielsen SoundScan.[9] The Japanese edition of the album also had the bonus track "It's Gonna Be Love". This song was also on the soundtrack of Moore's romantic drama A Walk to Remember (2002).[10]

    The album also achieved moderate success worldwide, with Epic deciding that they would release the album where the first one did well. Mandy Moore performed well in Asia, being certified 4× Platinum in Philippines and 33rd Best Selling Album of all time in the Philippines with 200,000 copies sold.[11] In New Zealand it became her second album to hit the top 40, peaking at No. 39. It reached No. 37 on the Australian ARIA Charts, her highest to date. The album had sold 1.5 million copied worldwide it was Moore's third best-selling album.[12]

    Promotion

    Moore had her first headlined show, called "Mandy Moore Live @ ShoutBack", where she performed the songs:

    • "In My Pocket"
    • "One Sided Love"
    • "Turn the Clock Around"
    • "Cry"
    • "I Wanna Be with You"
    • "When I Talk to You"
    • "Candy"

    Moore also performed a number of songs live on TV shows, such as on

    Live with Regis and Kelly ("Cry"), The Tonight Show with Jay Leno ("Crush"), Channel V ("Crush"), and at the MTV Asia Awards ("Cry" as a duet with Regine Velasquez
    ), among others. None of the songs from the record were performed at any of Moore's shows after promotion of the album ended.

    Singles

    The first single released from the album was "

    CHR radio (the format in which Moore received most of her airplay), peaking at number twenty in Radio & Records. The song also peaked at number twenty-one on the Pop 100 chart, where it stayed for nine weeks,[13] and also appeared on the seventh installment of U.S. version of the compilation series Now That's What I Call Music!, released in July 2001. In My Pocket performed fairly well outside of the United States in countries like Australia, where it reached number 11. The music video was directed by Matthew Rolston and was shot in a nightclub that was given a Middle Eastern look to match the similar feel of the song itself, including belly dancers and fire blowers
    . Moore sat on a throne and watched almost as if she were royalty. In other scenes, Moore is seen dancing and almost flirting with one of the dancers.

    The second single, "Crush", also failed to make much impact on the U.S. charts, but it appeared on the eighth installment of the U.S. compilation series, Now That's What I Call Music!, released in November 2001. The music video was directed by Chris Applebaum and edited by Nabil Mechi. On September 10, 2001, it became Moore's first video to reach the number-one spot on MTV's countdown show Total Request Live. In the video, Moore sits in her crush's room and tries to wake him up. She performs with her band in another room. The video ends with Moore putting on a replica of the jacket Michael Jackson wears in his "Thriller" music video, walks out of her apartment and looks up at her crush and smiles.

    The third and final single from the album, "Cry",[14] was featured in the soundtrack for A Walk to Remember.

    Track listing

    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    1."
    Emilio Estefan Jr., Randall Barlow
    3:40
    2."You Remind Me"Enrico Cremonesi, P. Aaron, R. SafiniaPhillip "The Eraser" Aaron, Enrico Cremonesi3:34
    3."Saturate Me"R. M. Barlow, S. Green*, T. MitchellEstefan Jr., Barlow, Tim Mitchell4:01
    4."One Sided Love"E. Estefan, Jr., J. Garza, Jon Secada, P. FloresEstefan, Jon Secada, Pablo Flores, Javier Garza4:05
    5."17"Shelly Peiken, Todd ChapmanTodd Chapman3:59
    6."Cry"James Renald, Dominic RiccitelloRenald, Peter Mokran[1]3:43
    7."Crush"Kenny Gioia, Shep GoodmanGioia & Sheppard3:42
    8."It Only Took a Minute"E. Estefan, Jr., G. Noriega, J. Secada, T. MitchellEstefan Jr., Secada, Mitchell, George Noriega3:39
    9."Turn the Clock Around"D. Rice, J. W. Baxter, N. TrevisickDavid Rice, Nick Trevisick, Alexis Dufrense3:44
    10."Yo-Yo"Scott Cutler, Anne PrevenCutler & Preven4:17
    11."From Loving You"Diane WarrenAlexis Dufrense3:34
    12."Split Chick"J. Freebairn, M. ElizondoMatthew Hager3:44
    13."When I Talk to You"Mandy Moore, Matthew HagerMatthew Hager4:21
    Japanese bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    14."It's Gonna Be Love"Anthony Micheal Bruno, Thomas V. BrunoTony Bruno, Tommy Bruno3:57
    Southeast Asia bonus track
    No.TitleWriter(s)Length
    14."I Wanna Be with You" (acoustic version)Tiffany Arbuckle, Shelly Peiken, Keith Thomas3:07
    Southeast Asia limited edition
    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    14."Feel Me"Derek Bramble, Lisa LaShawn, Dion Rambo, Jaques RichmondDerek Bramble4:08
    15."I Wanna Be with You" (acoustic version)Tiffany Arbuckle, Shelly Peiken, Keith Thomas 3:07

    Personnel

    Credits for Mandy Moore adapted from AllMusic.[15]

    Charts