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Eliza Doolittle (album)


FieldValue
nameEliza Doolittle
typestudio
artistEliza Doolittle
coverElizaDoolittle.jpg
released12 July 2010
recorded1 September 2006 – 31 March 2010
studioStanley House Studios, Swamp Studios, The Diary Studios, 600 Feet Studios (London) · Echo Studios (Los Angeles)
genre{{flatlist
length41:12
labelParlophone
producer{{flatlist
prev_titleEliza Doolittle
prev_year2009
next_titleIn Your Hands
next_year2013
misc{{Singles
nameEliza Doolittle
typestudio
single1Skinny Genes
single1date11 April 2010
single2Pack Up
single2date5 July 2010
single3Rollerblades
single3date17 October 2010
single4Skinny Genes (re-release)
single4date27 December 2010
single5Mr Medicine
single5date7 March 2011{{cite web
urlhttp://www.radio1.gr/music/forthcoming_uk_singles.htm
workRadio 1
titleNew Releases U.K. – Forthcoming Singles
url-statusdead
archiveurlhttps://web.archive.org/web/20121020105600/http://www.radio1.gr/music/forthcoming_uk_singles.htm
archivedate20 October 2012
  • Indie pop
  • folk
  • soul
  • ska
  • Steve Chrisanthou
  • Craigie Dodds
  • Jimmy Napes
  • Matthew Prime
  • Jonny Sharp
  • Phil Thornalley
  • Mads Hauge
  • James Napier
  • Greg Kurstin |url-status=dead

Eliza Doolittle is the debut album by British recording artist Eliza Doolittle. It was released by Parlophone Records on 12 July 2010 in the United Kingdom. The first single, "Skinny Genes", was released on 11 April 2010. The second single, "Pack Up", was released on 5 July 2010. The album was released in the United States on 19 April 2011.

Critical reception

Upon release, Eliza Doolittle received positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 68 based on 6 reviews, indicating "generally favorable reviews". Michael Hann, writing for The Guardian, called Eliza Doolittle "a coherent and effortless-sounding debut album [...] It's a delicious soufflé [...] that feels as light as air, melting on your tongue. Admittedly, that also means that as soon as it is over it has disappeared without a trace, but do picnic soundtracks really need to be weighed down with pretensions to significance?" Steve Horowitz from PopMatters fount that the album "mostly succeeds. The baker's dozen worth of tracks here are delightfully sweet, if maybe a bit light in content. This is ear candy that's meant to be pleasing rather than personal, and avoids political or controversial topics."

AllMusic editor by Jon O'Brien found that the "formula of brush-stroke percussion, bluesy guitars, and light airy melodies is repeated throughout the entire 13 tracks, but Doolittle's timeless and effortlessly dreamy tones make the slight repetitiveness a lot easier to endure [...] While its relentless chirpiness may be a little too twee for some, Eliza Doolittle is still a beguiling debut that would undoubtedly have found an audience even without the benefit of her showbiz background." Simon Cage from Daily Express remarked that the "songs are quirky and strong, her voice gorgeous and the whole thing is busting out all over with charm. Nice work young lady." Fraser McAlpine of BBC wrote that "if you can handle a lot of wacky in your pop music, there's a lovely album here waiting for you."

Chart performance

Eliza Doolitte peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart. On 7 January 2011, it was announced by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) that the album had been certified Platinum for sales of 300,000 in the UK.

Track listing

  • Eliza Caird
  • Matthew Prime
  • Tim Woodcock
  • Caird
  • Jonny Sharp
  • Craigie Dodds
  • Dodds
  • Sharp
  • Caird
  • Phil Thornalley
  • Mads Hauge
  • Thornalley
  • Hauge
  • Caird
  • Prime
  • Woodcock
  • Caird
  • John Beck
  • Steven Chrisanthou
  • Caird
  • Dodds
  • Caird
  • Dodds
  • Will Johnstone
  • Caird
  • Sharp
  • Dodds
  • Caird
  • James Napier
  • Caird
  • Greg Kurstin
  • Lauren Christy
  • Caird
  • Prime
  • Woodcock
  • George Powell
  • Felix Powell
  • Caird
  • Dodds
  • Caird
  • Kurstin
  • Caird
  • Dodds

;Notes

  • "Missing" features a sample from the 1959 The Fleetwoods hit "Come Softly to Me"
  • "Pack Up" features uncredited vocals from Lloyd Wade and contains elements of "Pack Up Your Troubles in Your Old Kit-Bag"

Personnel

  • Eliza Doolittle – lead vocals, composer, original concept
  • George Asaf – composer
  • Avigail – stylist
  • John Beck – composer, keyboards
  • Andy Bradfield – mixing
  • Ian Brudge – cello
  • Steve Chrisanthou – bass, composer, engineer, guitar, mixing, producer, programming
  • Lauren Christy – composer
  • Pete Davis – programming
  • Craigie Dodds – bass, composer, drums, guitar, keyboards, mixing, piano, producer, programming, ukulele, backing vocals, whistle
  • Grippa – mixing
  • Mads Hauge – bass, composer, engineer, hand clapping, mandolin, maracas, melodica, producer, whistle
  • Simon Helm – art direction, design
  • Dean James – engineer, percussion
  • Will Johnstone – composer, engineer, mellotron
  • Jonny $. – bass, composer, guitar, mixing, percussion, producer
  • Greg Kurstin – composer, engineer, guitar, keyboards, mixing, producer, programming
  • Arnulf Lindner – double bass
  • Tom Meadows – drums
  • Jimmy Napes – mixing, producer
  • James Napier – bass, composer, drums, guitar
  • Jake Newman – double bass
  • Felix Powell – composer
  • Matt Prime – composer, guitar, keyboards, mixing, producer, programming, backing vocals
  • Dan Sanders – art direction
  • Ash Soan – drums
  • The PSM – drums, percussion
  • Liz Taw – hair stylist
  • Phil Thornalley – composer, glockenspiel, guitar, handclapping, piano, producer
  • Lloyd Wade – vocals
  • Andy Whitton – photography
  • Paul Williams – guitar
  • Tim Woodcock – composer, backing vocals
  • Christian Wright – mastering

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2010)Peak
positionCanada (Canoe)
89

Year-end charts

Chart (2010)PositionUK Albums (OCC)Chart (2011)PositionUK Albums (OCC)
44
74

Certifications

Release history

RegionDateFormat(s)LabelEditionUnited KingdomBrazilItalyCanadaUnited States
12 July 2010{{flatlistParlophoneStandard
15 September 2010{{flatlistEMIStandard
28 September 2010{{flatlistStandard
8 February 2011{{flatlistStandard
19 April 2011Digital downloadCapitol RecordsStandard

References

References

  1. "Music – - Singles Release Diary". Digital Spy.
  2. "Eliza Doolittle: Eliza Doolittle: MP3 Downloads". Amazon.
  3. [http://www.metacritic.com/music/eliza-doolittle/eliza-doolittle Metacritic]
  4. O'Brien, Jon. "Eliza Doolittle". [[AllMusic]].
  5. Hann, Michael. (9 July 2010). "Review "The Guardian" Review on Eliza Doolittle". The Guardian.
  6. (9 July 2010). "Review "Eliza Doolittle" Album". Daily Express.
  7. (4 November 2010). "CDs of the week: Scissor Sisters are back with disco to make you dance | Music". Evening Standard.
  8. (12 July 2010). "Eliza Doolittle: Eliza Doolittle Album Review". The Music Fix.
  9. (7 July 2010). "Fri, Jul 02, 2010 – Eliza Doolittle". The Irish Times.
  10. Horowitz, Steve. "Eliza Doolittle: Eliza Doolittle < PopMatters". PopMatters.
  11. (30 December 2010). "Eliza Doolittle – Eliza Doolittle on". Fasterlouder.com.au.
  12. Fraser McAlpine. "Eliza Doolittle Eliza Doolittle Review". BBC Music.
  13. "Archived copy".
  14. "CANOE – JAM! Music SoundScan Charts". Jam.canoe.ca.
  15. "End of Year Album Chart Top 100 – 2010". Official Charts Company.
  16. "End of Year Album Chart Top 100 – 2011". Official Charts Company.
  17. (9 July 2010). "Eliza Doolittle by Eliza Doolittle – Download Eliza Doolittle on iTunes". iTunes Store.
  18. "Eliza Doolittle: Eliza Doolittle: Amazon.co.uk: Music". Amazon.
  19. "Cd: Eliza Doolittle – Doolittle, Eliza – Pop". Livrariacultura.com.br.
  20. (4 March 2011). "Eliza Doolittle – Eliza Doolittle – cd di Eliza Doolittle – – disco di Eliza Doolittle – IBS". Ibs.it.
  21. (8 February 2011). "Eliza Doolittle by Eliza Doolittle – Download Eliza Doolittle on iTunes". iTunes Store.
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