Kaleidoscope World (Swing Out Sister album)

Last updated

Kaleidoscope World
Swing Out Sister - Kaleidoscope World CD album cover.jpg
Studio album by
Released25 May 1989
Genre
Length59:40
Label Fontana
Producer
Swing Out Sister chronology
It's Better to Travel
(1987)
Kaleidoscope World
(1989)
Get in Touch with Yourself
(1992)
Singles from Kaleidoscope World
  1. "You on My Mind"
    Released: May 1989
  2. "Where in the World"
    Released: 1989
  3. "Waiting Game"
    Released: 1989
  4. "Forever Blue"
    Released: 1989
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [1]
Hi-Fi News & Record Review B:1 [3]
New Musical Express 7/10 [4]
Record Mirror Star full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svg [5]

Kaleidoscope World is the second studio album by the British band Swing Out Sister. It was released in 1989 and features the singles "You on My Mind" (UK #28), "Where in the World?" (UK #47), "Forever Blue" (UK #80), and "Waiting Game". With the addition of an orchestra, this album features a more sophisticated, easy listening/retro sound than their previous synth-oriented debut album, 1987's It's Better to Travel . The album reached #9 on the UK Albums Chart. [6]

Contents

Background

The album was notable for being released on the newly reactivated Polygram subsidiary label Fontana Records, which had been a highly successful record label in the 1960s (something reflected in the stylised cover art for Kaleidoscope World). The album also features solos from the veteran harmonica player Tommy Reilly. Original band member Martin Jackson left Swing Out Sister during the making of this album. Although the liner notes give "special thanks to Martin Jackson" and his co-writing credits appear on the songs "Tainted" and "Between Strangers", they also point out that "Swing Out Sister are Corinne Drewery and Andy Connell." Jimmy Webb arranged and conducted the orchestra for "Forever Blue" and "Precious Words."

Video EP

In 1990 the video EP Kaleidoscope World – The Videos was released featuring videos for the singles and a video for "The Kaleidoscope Affair". Excerpts from "Coney Island Man" were also used as incidental music.

Track listing

All tracks written by Andy Connell and Corinne Drewery, except where noted.

LP and cassette version

  1. "You on My Mind" – (3:32) (Connell, Drewery, Paul Staveley O'Duffy)
  2. "Where in the World" – (5:33)
  3. "Forever Blue" – (4:17)
  4. "Heart For Hire" – (4:25)
  5. "Tainted" – (3:59) (Connell, Drewery, Martin Jackson)
  6. "Waiting Game" – (4:15)
  7. "Precious Words" – (4:13)
  8. "Masquerade" – (4:46)
  9. "Between Strangers" – (4:06) (Connell, Drewery, Jackson)
  10. "The Kaleidoscope Affair" – (3:09)

CD version [7]

  1. "You on My Mind" – (3:32)
  2. "Where in the World" – (5:33)
  3. "Forever Blue" – (4:17)
  4. "Heart For Hire" – (4:25)
  5. "Tainted" – (3:59)
  6. "Waiting Game" – (4:15)
  7. "Precious Words" – (4:13)
  8. "Masquerade" – (4:46)
  9. "Between Strangers" – (4:06)
  10. "The Kaleidoscope Affair" – (3:09)
  11. "Coney Island Man" – (3:43) (A. Connell, C. Drewery)
  12. "Precious Words (Instrumental) – (4:11)
  13. "Forever Blue (String Mix) – (4:13)
  14. "Masquerade (Instrumental) – (4:46)

Notes

Personnel

Adapted from the liner notes of Kaleidoscope World. [8]

Swing Out Sister

Additional Musicians

Orchestra (Tracks 3 & 7)


Production

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Swing Out Sister</span> British pop group

Swing Out Sister are a British pop group, best known worldwide for the 1986 song "Breakout". Other hits include "You On My Mind", "Twilight World", "Waiting Game", and a remake of the Eugene Record soul composition "Am I the Same Girl?"

Martin Jackson is a British drummer who has played with several bands from Manchester, although his most successful roles were with Magazine in 1978 with the release of the influential Real Life album, and Swing Out Sister in 1986, with the hit song "Breakout".

<i>Dont Mind If I Do</i> (Culture Club album) 1999 studio album by Culture Club

Don't Mind If I Do is the fifth album by the British new wave band Culture Club, released in 1999 by Virgin Records. The album was released only in Europe and Japan, though some promo copies also circulated in Australia.

<i>What Up, Dog?</i> 1988 studio album by Was (Not Was)

What Up, Dog? is the third studio album by Was. It became the group's breakthrough album worldwide and was ranked #99 on the Rolling Stone magazine's list of the 100 Best Albums of the 1980s. The cover illustration was credited to Christoph Simon and Karen Kelly.

<i>Barry Manilow</i> (1989 album) 1989 studio album by Barry Manilow

Barry Manilow is a studio album released by singer and songwriter Barry Manilow in 1989. It was Manilow's thirteenth studio album overall and second studio album on his second tenure with Arista Records. The album represented a hint of future album releases in that many of the songs were not written/co-written by Manilow, which until that point had been rare for him. After the release of this album, Manilow embarked on introducing contemporary audiences to pop music of the 1930s through the late 1940s.

<i>Blaze of Glory</i> (Joe Jackson album) 1989 studio album by Joe Jackson

Blaze of Glory is the tenth studio album by English rock musician Joe Jackson, released in 1989. Jackson has stated that the album and the songs themselves were an examination of his generation as the 1980s were ending, ranging from the optimism of the 1950s to the politics of terrorism and the Cold War, to yuppies ("Discipline") and rockers who are well past their prime. The title track compares the legacy of a classic rock musician who died young with the current wannabes.

<i>Reputation</i> (Dusty Springfield album) 1990 studio album by Dusty Springfield

Reputation is the thirteenth studio album by British singer Dusty Springfield, and twelfth released. Issued on the Parlophone Records label in the UK and the rest of Europe in June 1990, Reputation was not only Springfield's first studio album in eight years at the time but also her first album to be released in her native UK since 1979's Living Without Your Love. After a string of commercially overlooked albums through the late 1970s and early 1980s Reputation finally managed to resurrect Springfield's career and belatedly resulted in her being re-evaluated and recognised by both music critics and the general public as the UK's foremost 'blue-eyed soul' singer. Mainly produced by Pet Shop Boys and Julian Mendelsohn and recorded in the UK over a period of some eighteen months, Reputation became her highest charting and best-selling album in the UK since 1970's From Dusty with Love, peaking at No. 18 and selling 60,000 copies within two weeks of its release.

<i>Love All the Hurt Away</i> 1981 studio album by Aretha Franklin

Love All the Hurt Away is the twenty-seventh studio album by American singer Aretha Franklin. It was released on August 20, 1981. This album is the singer's second release under the Arista Records label. The Arif Mardin-produced disc reached fourth place on Billboard's R&B albums chart and number 36 on the main Billboard album chart, selling roughly 250,000 copies in the US.

<i>Get in Touch with Yourself</i> 1992 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Get in Touch with Yourself is the third studio album by the British pop group Swing Out Sister. The album was released on Fontana Records in 1992 and was produced by Paul Staveley O'Duffy.

<i>The Living Return</i> 1994 studio album by Swing Out Sister

The Living Return is the fourth studio album by the British pop group Swing Out Sister. It was released in August 1994 on Mercury Records.

<i>Shapes and Patterns</i> 1997 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Shapes and Patterns is the fifth studio album by British pop group Swing Out Sister. It was first released in Japan in March 1997 on Mercury Records, and in Europe and the United States the following year. Producer Paul Staveley O'Duffy, who co-wrote half of the songs on the album, was back at the helm. As an orchestra was once again employed, the lush arrangements characteristic of Kaleidoscope World (1989) resurfaced. The album features the track "Now You're Not Here" which was used as the theme to the Japanese programme Mahiru No Tsuki, as well as a reworked version of "Better Make It Better" which had featured on their previous studio album, The Living Return (1994). The album was promoted with the singles "Somewhere in the World" and "We Could Make It Happen."

<i>Filth and Dreams</i> 1999 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Filth and Dreams is the sixth studio album by British pop group Swing Out Sister. It was released in Japan in March 1999, and unlike all of their previous studio albums, has not seen release in any other country. This album was their first to not contain any singles.

<i>Somewhere Deep in the Night</i> 2001 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Somewhere Deep in the Night is the seventh studio album by the British pop group Swing Out Sister. Produced by longtime collaborator Paul Staveley O'Duffy, the album was first released in Japan in 2001, with a European and American release the following year.

<i>Beautiful Mess</i> (Swing Out Sister album) 2008 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Beautiful Mess is the title of the ninth studio album by the British pop group Swing Out Sister. It was produced by group member Andy Connell, who has been with Swing Out Sister since its inception.

<i>Best of Swing Out Sister</i> 1996 greatest hits album by Swing Out Sister

Best of is a 1996 retrospective compilation album by Swing Out Sister, containing their successful singles spanning the years 1986 through 1996. It is their first compilation album—and last Fontana Records album.

<i>Your Hearts in Good Hands</i> 1995 studio album by Al Green

Your Heart's in Good Hands is American singer Al Green's 26th studio album, his first after a several-year hiatus from secular music, released by MCA Records in 1995. Described as "a solid project that approaches the Rev. Green's classic work with Hi Records", the album was said to capture much of Al Green's early vocal sound, keeping true to his original style but also adding modern elements. "Keep On Pushing Love", a single released from the album, produced by Arthur Baker and co-written with Lotti Golden, Al Green and Tommy Faragher invokes "the original, sparse sound of his [Green's] early classics." "Your Heart's in Good Hands", a single produced by Narada Michael Walden and written by Diane Warren, was also released from the LP.

<i>Big Thing</i> (Blue Zone album) 1988 studio album by Blue Zone

Big Thing is the only album by Lisa Stansfield's band, Blue Zone. It was released by Arista Records in June 1988. The songs were written by Blue Zone members: Stansfield, Ian Devaney and Andy Morris, and produced by Paul Staveley O'Duffy. The album also includes one cover, "Jackie," co-produced by Ric Wake. Big Thing spawned three singles: "On Fire," "Thinking About His Baby" and "Jackie." A remastered and expanded deluxe 2-CD set was released in the United Kingdom on 18 November 2016; it was the album's first release in the band's native country.

<i>Breakout</i> (Swing Out Sister album) 2001 compilation album by Swing Out Sister

Breakout is a compilation album by English pop group Swing Out Sister in 2001. The album features many of the band's singles as well as album tracks and B-sides.

<i>Force</i> (A Certain Ratio album) 1986 studio album by A Certain Ratio

Force is the fifth studio album by the English post-punk band A Certain Ratio, released in November 1986 by Factory Records; their final release on the label. Stuart James co-produced the album with the band. It was recorded and mixed between July and August 1986 at Yello 2 Studios in Stockport.

<i>Almost Persuaded</i> (album) 2017 studio album by Swing Out Sister

Almost Persuaded is the tenth studio album released by jazz/pop duo Swing Out Sister. It was produced by band member Andy Connell. It is the culmination of "Moveable Feast", a PledgeMusic project that had been running for several years. In 2015, the band had released Rushes, an in-progress version of the album. Almost Persuaded was released via direct MP3 download in November 2017 and then via autographed CD to those had pledged to the project in December 2017. The album was released on 22 June 2018.

References

  1. 1 2 Loftus, Johnny. "AllMusic review". AllMusic . Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  2. Jones, Dylan (1997). "Swing Out Sister". Ultra Lounge: The Lexicon of Easy Listening. New York: Universe Publishing. p. 117.
  3. Dellar, Fred (August 1989). "Review: Swing Out Sister — Kaleidoscope World" (PDF). Hi-Fi News & Record Review (magazine). Vol. 34, no. 8. Croydon: Link House Magazines Ltd. p. 112. ISSN   0142-6230. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 September 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2021 via World Radio History.
  4. Fadele, Dele (20 May 1989). "Long Play: Swing Out Sister — Kaleidoscope World (Fontana)". New Musical Express . London: IPC Limited. p. 25. ISSN   0028-6362. Archived from the original on 10 March 2024. Retrieved 10 March 2024 via Flickr.
  5. Levy, Eleanor (13 May 1989). "Review: Swing Out Sister — Kaleidoscope World" (PDF). Record Mirror . London: Spotlight Publications Ltd. p. 31. ISSN   0144-5804. Archived from the original (PDF) on 6 October 2021. Retrieved 27 January 2022 via World Radio History.
  6. "The Official Charts Company - Kaleidoscope World by Swing Out Sister Search". Official Charts Company. 9 November 2013.
  7. "Swing Out Sister – Kaleidoscope World (1989, CD)". Discogs.
  8. Kaleidoscope World (liner notes). Swing Out Sister. Fontana. 1989. 838 293-2.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)