I'm Not that Kind of Girl | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Marti Webb |
Cover: | I'm not that kind of girl.jpg |
Released: | February 1983 |
Recorded: | 1981–82 |
Genre: | Pop, MOR |
Length: | 37:35 |
Label: | Polydor |
Producer: | David Hentschel |
Prev Title: | Won't Change Places |
Prev Year: | 1981 |
Next Title: | Encore |
Next Year: | 1985 |
I'm Not That Kind of Girl is a studio album released in 1983 by British singer Marti Webb. It was a follow-up to 1981's Won't Change Places. The songs on the album are linked by a story and were written by David Hentschel and Don Black.
The album was produced by David Hentschel, who also composed the music. The lyrics were written by Don Black who was at the time, Webb's manager. It was in the song cycle format that had proved successful for Webb's 1980 album Tell Me On a Sunday which Black had co-written with Andrew Lloyd Webber. The story is about a woman meeting up with a former lover and embarking on a new relationship with him, dealing with her insecurities in between, and ending with her about to marry him. Some of the songs are humorous in tone with Janet Reger and Jane Fonda referenced in the titles, although takes a more dramatic theme in the closing two tracks. The album's genre is contemporary pop, somewhat at odds with Webb's usual style, but it does feature a number of power ballads. The album was originally titled One Afternoon.[1]
It was Webb's third and final album for the Polydor label but failed to chart. Singles from the album were "Getting It Right", "I'm Not That Kind of Girl" and "Didn't Mean to Fall in Love".[2]
The album was recorded between November 1981 and June 1982 at The Manor, The Townhouse, Maison Rouge, and Hipposound Studios. The album boasted a strong musical backing, including Kiki Dee and Phil Collins - the latter having worked with Hentschel many times before.[3] Prolific session musicians John Giblin and Phil Palmer also provided musical backing.
* A 40-second musical interlude occurs between tracks 3 and 4 (Side One)
All tracks were written by David Hentschel and Don Black.