Robbery | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | September 18, 1983 | |||
Recorded | 1982–83 | |||
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Label | Epic | |||
Producer | Teena Marie | |||
Teena Marie chronology | ||||
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Robbery is the fifth studio album by American singer-songwriter Teena Marie, released in September 18, 1983. It is her first album for Epic Records, following her acrimonious departure from Motown the previous year. The album was written and produced by Marie herself and features contributions from Patrice Rushen, Paulinho da Costa, and Steve Ferrone among others. However, the album did not repeat the success of her last Motown release It Must Be Magic (1981) stalling at number 13 on the Black Albums chart and only reaching number 119 on the Billboard Albums chart.
The album placed three singles on the US Black Singles chart" "Fix It", peaking at #21, followed by "Midnight Magnet" (#31) and "Dear Lover" (#77).
In 2012, the album was re-released in a remastered and expanded CD edition containing four additional tracks.
Included on this album is the infamous song, "Cassanova Brown". After meeting Rick James in the '70s and being signed to the same label, James and Marie began a relationship, first professional, progressing (according to Marie) to a romantic one, and finally leading to an engagement. Although James himself denied ever having a romantic involvement with Marie, she said they were engaged for a few weeks. When James' alleged infidelities came to light, Marie realized that she herself was a mistress; James had a girlfriend, Alfie Davidson, who would later substantiate that James and Marie were once an item, while she was his girlfriend. After the breakup, their relationship waned to a tumultuous friendship. The lyrics are very thinly veiled in her contempt for the situation.
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | link |
Spin Alternative Record Guide | 7/10 [1] |
All songs written by Teena Marie.
Bonus tracks - 2012 SoulMusic reissue
Credits for Robbery adapted from Allmusic [2]
Reissue credits
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