ClassiKhan explained

ClassiKhan
Type:Studio Album
Artist:Chaka Khan
Cover:Chaka Khan - ClassiKhan.jpg
Released:October 5, 2004
Length:46:50
Producer:
  • Eve Nelson
  • Ira Schickman
Prev Title:Dance Classics of Chaka Khan
Prev Year:1999
Next Title:The Platinum Collection
Next Year:2006

ClassiKhan is the tenth studio album by American singer Chaka Khan, featuring the London Symphony Orchestra. It was released by independent label Sanctuary Records on October 5, 2004 in United Kingdom, with international releases overseen by different record companies. Produced and arranged by Eve Nelson, ClassiKhan was mainly recorded at London's legendary Abbey Road Studios and features guest appearances by pianist Joe Sample and percussionist Sheila E., among others.

Background

While ClassiKhan does focus on jazz and swing standards, among them "Stormy Weather", "Hazel's Hips", "'Round Midnight" and "Teach Me Tonight", it also features an eclectic selection of classics from other genres, including pop culture favourites such as Broadway show tune "Hey Big Spender" from the musical Sweet Charity, Peggy Lee's "Is That All There Is?" penned by Leiber & Stoller and even a '60s country-and-western classic in the form of Patsy Cline's "Crazy", written by Willie Nelson. ClassiKhan also features the themes of film favourites from Khan's youth, "To Sir With Love" and the James Bond themes "Goldfinger" and "Diamonds Are Forever". The collection concludes with one new composition, the ballad "I Believe", co-written by Khan and the album's producer Ira Shickman.

The album was mainly recorded at London's legendary Abbey Road Studios and it features guest appearances by, among others, pianist Joe Sample and percussionist Sheila E., best known for her work with Prince. The title ClassiKhan is also a reference to Khan's accompaniment on the set. Whereas on the Echoes of an Era album Khan used a five-piece all-star jazz ensemble, on ClassiKhan she is accompanied by The New York All Star Musicians – but with the addition of the full London Symphony Orchestra, conducted and arranged by Eve Nelson and with orchestrations by producer Ira Schickman and Gary Anderson.

Critical reception

AllMusic editor Andy Kellman felt that "while it's true that many of these songs [...] have been worn out by so many other renditions of varying quality, Khan injects plenty of her tirelessly singular personality. Most thrilling of all is a pair of nods to Shirley Bassey, John Barry, and James Bond [...] The only obvious problem with the disc is its title. Longtime Khan fans are likely to glance at the cover of the disc and see it as another career retrospective – or, at most, re-recordings of the singer's old material — that they don't need to hear. That's clearly not the case here." Eric Henderson from Slant Magazine rated the album two and a half stars out of five. He found that "not one single standard is given a novel twist, and each arrangement seems to have the exact same crescendos and ritardandos." He further noted: "Even worse, the production of Classikhan is so sparkling clean and the homogenization of the London Orchestra’s various sections so democratically Teflonesque that even listeners whose entire CD collection is made up of Original Broadway Cast Recordings would find themselves struggling to stay interested."

Commercial performance

ClassiKhan reached number 42 on Billboards US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. By 2005, it had sold 46,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan.[1]

Track listing

Notes

Personnel

Performers and musicians

Technical

Release history

ClassiKhan release history
RegionDateFormat(s)Label
JapanOctober 5, 2004JVC Victor
United KingdomSanctuary Records
United States

Notes and References

  1. Burgundy. Billboard. January 21, 2006.