Louder Than Words (album) explained

Louder Than Words
Type:Studio album
Artist:Lionel Richie
Cover:Lionel Richie Louder than Words CD cover.JPG
Released:April 16, 1996
Studio:
Genre:R&B
Length:67:05
Label:Mercury
Producer:
Prev Title:Back to Front
Prev Year:1992
Next Year:1997

Louder Than Words is the fourth studio album by American singer Lionel Richie. It was released by Mercury Records on April 16, 1996, in the United States. The album marked Richie's debut with the record label as well as his first album of new material in 10 years after a longer hiatus during which he went through a much-publicized divorce from his first wife Brenda Harvey and the loss of his father and a close friend. Apart from chief producer James Anthony Carmichael, the singer worked with Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, Babyface and David Foster on Louder Than Words.

Upon release, the album earned generally mixed to positive review from music critics, many of whom praised Richie's vocal performances and the ballads on the album but found the overall material old-fashioned. Commercially, Louder Than Words failed to reprise the success of Richies's previous multi-platinum studio albums Can't Slow Down (1983) and Dancing on the Ceiling (1986), though it entered the top thirty on the majority of the album charts it appeared on, going gold in France and the US and silver in the United Kingdom.

Background

Following years of intense touring and recording, Richie was suffering from burnout symptoms by March 1986.[1] While he only intended to take a year off, his father, Lionel Richie Sr., fell ill before dying in 1990.[1] After his death, Richie struggled with what he described as "a massive depression".[2] At the same time, he was divorcing from his first wife Brenda Harvey after nearly two decades of marriage.[1] Right after that, amid the release of his first compilation album Back to Front (1992) and the pre-production of a new studio album, his best friend informed Richie that he was dying from AIDS-related causes.[1] It was not until his passing, that Richie felt ready to produce new music.[1] Welcoming his second child, son Miles, with his second wife Diane Alexander in May 1994 eventually helped jumpstarting a return to recording.[2] In a 2018 interview with People magazine, Richie commented: "They didn’t know what the hell I did for a living so I thought at that particular point, let’s go back and prove to the kids what I do. And so that was the incentive. I realized, this is what I should be doing."[2]

Critical reception

AllMusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine found that "although there are some slight attempts to incorporate new jack and hip-hop influences into Richie's sound, Louder Than Words relies on his trademark balladeering, which remains his forte. All of the weak moments on Louder Than Words are ill-advised forays into rap – to put it bluntly, he can rap about as well as Snoop Dogg can sing. Although the ballads aren't as strong as his late-'70s and early-'80s standards, they are nevertheless pleasant, which makes the record a worthwhile purchase for fans." Chicago Tribune critic Calvin Wilson declared the album "a mixed bag. Some of the selections are little more than filler – but when Richie is fully engaged, he comes up with music that's truly exhilarating. To be sure, Richie understands what's expected of him."[3]

Cheo Hodari Coker, writing for the Los Angeles Times, called the album a "welcome return" and wrote: "From beginning to end, Louder Than Words is palatable enough for the crossover crowd, but also soulful enough for his now-older black female fans, many of whom moved on to Babyface in Richie’s absence. The elegant “Don’t Wanna Lose You,” the uncharacteristically sensual "Say I Do" and the easygoing jam "Ordinary Girl" show that Richie hasn’t lost any of his charm or compositional powers." Entertainment Weekly critic J.D. Considine remarked that "Richie’s middle-of-the-road R&B may as well be from another century. It isn’t that he can’t work a groove; what makes Richie seem so old-fashioned is that he doesn’t understand that these days the groove is everything. A pity, because even if he hasn’t kept up with the times, he has grown [...] Even if Louder Than Words doesn’t put him back on top of the charts, it’s proof that Richie is on top of his game."

Chart performance

In the United States, Louder Than Words debuted at number 33 on the US Billboard 200 with first weeks sales of 28,000 copies.[4] It peaked at number 28.

Track listing

Notes

Personnel

Credits lifted from the album's liner notes.[5]

Performers and musicians

Technical

Charts

Year-end charts

Release history

List of release dates, showing region, formats, label, and reference
RegionDateFormat(s)Label
EuropeApril 9, 1996Mercury Records
United StatesApril 16, 1996

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Neil. Strauss. The Pop Life. . April 18, 1996. November 3, 2020.
  2. Web site: Lindsay. Kimble . Lionel Richie Says He Went Into a 'Massive Depression' After His Father's Death: He 'Was My Hero'. . April 20, 2018. November 3, 2020.
  3. Web site: Tuskgee. . November 3, 2020 . June 6, 1996. Wilson. Calvin .
  4. Web site: Arts and entertainment reports from The Times, national and international news services and the nation's press.. Los Angeles Times. April 25, 1996. March 1, 2012.
  5. Louder Than Words. Lionel Richie. 1996. Mercury Records. booklet.
  6. Web site: Jaaroverzichten – Album 1996. dutchcharts.nl. November 3, 2020. Dutch.