Ithaca | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 21, 2010 | |||
Recorded | February–April, 2010 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | Rock | |||
Length | 48:30 | |||
Label | Decca | |||
Producer | Paula Cole, Chris Roberts, Kevin Killen | |||
Paula Cole chronology | ||||
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Singles from Ithaca | ||||
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Ithaca is the fifth studio album by American singer/songwriter Paula Cole. This was released internationally on 21 September 2010 on Decca Records. It was tracked between February until the end of April 2010.
It is the first album entirely written by Cole (apart from "Somethin' I've Gotta Say" which was co-written with Kevin Barry) since 1999's Amen . The album was produced by Paula Cole and Chris Roberts. Kevin Killen (who produced Cole's debut record Harbinger ) co-produced.
“The overall theme of Ithaca is the return to home and making peace with it,” Cole says. “It's about accepting that I actually want to be with a man who is a lot like my father and that I am a lot like my mother—which I’ve written about in ‘Music In Me.’ I rebelled against these classical complexes and got really beat up in the world. So I’ve come to a quiet place of acceptance in my family and my hometown. That's why I called the album ‘Ithaca,’ which is the island Odysseus came home to in The Odyssey after 10 years of fighting and 10 years of trying to get back home. Rockport is my Ithaca, and coming home has been an Odyssean journey: enduring war and finding beautiful things in home. That's the tone of the album, that there is both darkness and light to this story. My journey has healed me, and in that healing process I’ve been able to work again.” [1]
Following the commercial disappointment of her 1999 album Amen , Cole parted ways with Warner Bros. Records disillusioned by the music industry and the pressure from label executives to sell records. Without a record deal, Cole decided to take time off and focus on raising her young daughter Sky. “I needed to get off the giant hamster wheel,” Cole says of her music career. “I wanted to find some other meaning to my life and it seemed impossible to combine motherhood with the music business. It was like being at a spiritual stop sign in the road. That's what inspired ‘Somethin’ I’ve Gotta Say,’ one of the older songs on the album. I thought I was done with the music career after having Sky.” [1]
Several years later, Cole was lured back to record-making by a friend, Blood, Sweat & Tears’ drummer Bobby Colomby, who produced her intimate, jazz-influenced collection Courage , which she released in 2007 while going through a difficult divorce. After the split was finalised in 2008, Cole moved back to her hometown of Rockport, Massachusetts to write what became Ithaca. [1]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [2] |
Allmusic praised Ithaca's emotionally raw, '90s sound, stating that it allowed Cole to work out her troubles while becoming reacquainted with the listener, taking them on a journey of pain and her ultimate rebirth. [3] The album has consistently been compared to Cole's Harbinger and This Fire records.
In support of Ithaca, Cole embarked on a small promotion tour which took her across the United States throughout October, November and December 2010. [4]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
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1. | "The Hard Way" | Paula Cole | 6:05 |
2. | "Waiting on a Miracle" | Paula Cole | 5:03 |
3. | "Music in Me" | Paula Cole | 4:02 |
4. | "Elegy" | Paula Cole | 4:50 |
5. | "Come on Inside" | Paula Cole | 4:54 |
6. | "P.R.E.N.U.P." | Paula Cole | 2:52 |
7. | "Violet Eyes" | Paula Cole | 4:37 |
8. | "Somethin' I’ve Gotta Say" | Paula Cole, Kevin Barry | 4:26 |
9. | "Sex" | Paula Cole | 8:10 |
10. | "2 Lifetimes" | Paula Cole | 3:24 |
No. | Title | Length |
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11. | "Second Chance" | 4:08 |
No. | Title | Length |
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11. | "Gypsy Road" | 5:16 |
Paula Dorothy Cole is an American singer-songwriter and producer. After gaining attention for her performances as a vocalist on Peter Gabriel's 1993–1994 Secret World Tour, she released her first album, Harbinger, which suffered from a lack of promotion when the label, Imago Records, folded shortly after its release. Her second album, This Fire (1996), brought her worldwide acclaim, peaking at number 20 on the Billboard 200 album chart and producing two hit singles, the triple-Grammy nominated "Where Have All the Cowboys Gone?", which reached the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100 in 1997, and "I Don't Want to Wait", which was used as the theme song of the television show Dawson's Creek. Cole was a featured performer in the 1996 prototype mini-tour for Lilith Fair, and also was a headliner for Lilith Fair in 1997 and 1998. She won the Grammy Award for Best New Artist in 1998, and also became the first woman ever to be nominated for "Producer of the Year" in her own right in that same year.
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