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Sinitta!


FieldValue
nameSinitta!
typeStudio album
artistSinitta
coverSinitta!1987.jpg
released14 December 1987
recorded1983–1987
genrePop, dance-pop
length46:38
labelFanfare Records
producerStock, Aitken and Waterman
Trevor Vallis
James George Hargreaves
Paul Hardcastle
next_titleWicked
next_year1988
misc{{Singles
nameSinitta!
typestudio
single1Cruising
single1date1984/1985
single2So Macho
single2date1985/1986
single3Feels Like The First Time
single3dateSeptember 1986
single4Toy Boy
single4dateJuly 1987
single5GTO
single5dateNovember 1987
single6Cross My Broken Heart
single6dateFebruary 1988

Trevor Vallis James George Hargreaves Paul Hardcastle Sinitta! is the debut studio album by American-British singer Sinitta, released in 1987. It features her biggest and best-known international hit single "So Macho".

Background

In 1987, Simon Cowell, then a talent scout, became closely associated with record producer Pete Waterman and would spend time with Waterman at his PWL studios complex, being mentored by him and learning about the effective running of a successful music business.

Around this time, Cowell was desperate for writing and production trio Stock Aitken Waterman (SAW) to work with Sinitta. "Feels Like the First Time", Sinitta's follow-up single to "So Macho", had charted low (UK number 45) and had only spent 5 weeks on the chart, whereas, in contrast, "So Macho" had been on the UK chart for 28 weeks in 1986, where it had peaked at number 2. Initially Waterman declined to work with Sinitta, claiming that SAW were too busy. In the end though, SAW did work with Sinitta and her first single with the Hit Factory was "Toy Boy".

Critical reception

A review in Music Week magazine was critical of Sinitta!, saying that "it would be churlish to totally denigrate this debut LP" and while it praised Sinitta's vocal performance, it blamed the songs for sounding "like chanting nursery rhymes or Seventies-flavoured disco songs". It concluded that the album "doesn't have the aplomb of Mel and Kim or the tiny appeal of Bananarama, but kids in the eight-13 age bracket will love it". By contrast, Nancy Culp of Record Mirror gave the album four stars of five, saying that Sinitta's "silly, fluffy bits of nonsense are the business" and that the light lyrics as well as the fact that SAW reuse the same riffs do not really matter. She added that the songs are "plain and simple, and just good fun" and concluded that the album "has to be the Christmas party record for wallies of all ages". Ron Wynn of AllMusic noted that the album "didn't have a song as clever or naughty as "So Many Men, So Little Time", recorded by Sinitta's mother Miquel Brown, and added that the singer's "crushed, coy voice made the point in a cutesy manner". By contrast, retrospectively, in a 2015 review, the Pop Rescue website gave the album four stars out of five, saying it was "fantastic... pumped with energy, and the hits kept rolling, with little pause for a duff track. It's a perfect 80's pop romp". Richard Lowe of Smash Hits praised the tracks produced by SAW, but found those by Paul Hardcastle "a wee bit dull", and concluded: "It's quite smashing. Honestly!"

Singles

"Cruising", "So Macho" and "Feels Like the First Time" were the three first singles from the album. The fourth one, "Toy Boy" was a massive hit, reaching number four in the UK in July 1987 and staying on the charts for 14 weeks. The song was the 27th best-selling single of 1987 in the UK, selling more than some number ones from that year, including Michael Jackson and Siedah Garrett's "I Just Can't Stop Loving You" and Steve "Silk" Hurley's "Jack Your Body". Two further singles were released from Sinitta!: "GTO" (UK number 15 in December 1987) and "Cross My Broken Heart" (UK number six in March 1988).

Track listing

Charts and sales

Weekly charts

Chart (1987–1988)Peak
positionAustralian Albums (Kent Music Report)Finland Albums (The Official Finnish Charts)Japanese Albums (Oricon)New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)UK Albums (OCC)
69
7
37
38
34

Certifications

References

References

  1. "pwl-empire.com".
  2. [http://www.pwl-empire.com/discog.html pwl-empire.com] {{webarchive. link. (28 February 2009)
  3. Wynn, Ron. "Sinitta! Review by Ron Wynn".
  4. Bell, Max. (1988-01-30). "Albums".
  5. Culp, Nancy. (12 December 1987). "Albums". Spotlight Publications Ltd..
  6. Lowe, Richard. (13-26 January 1988). "Albums".
  7. Cowell, Simon. (2004). "I Don't Mean To Be Rude But...". Ebury Press.
  8. (26 December 1987). "LP Reviews".
  9. (4 March 2015). "REVIEW: "SINITTA!" BY SINITTA (CD, 1987)". Pop Rescue.
  10. "Sinitta – Cherry Red Records".
  11. Kent, David. (1993). "[[Kent Music Report". Australian Chart Book, St Ives, N.S.W.
  12. Pennanen, Timo. (2021). "Sisältää hitin - 2. laitos Levyt ja esittäjät Suomen musiikkilistoilla 1.1.1960–30.6.2021". Kustannusosakeyhtiö Otava.
  13. "Japanese Charts-The Archives".
  14. (28 February 1988). "NZ Top 40 Albums Chart". [[Recorded Music NZ]].
  15. [https://www.officialcharts.com/artist/23105/sinitta/ OfficialCharts.com]
  16. Gilles, David. (10 October 1988). "Fanfare for the uncommon".
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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