Mama Lilla Would | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Vanessa Petruo |
Cover: | Mamalillawould.jpg |
Released: | 25 November 2005 |
Recorded: | 2004–05 |
Length: | 64:23 |
Label: | Universal Island |
Producer: | Oja Tunes |
Mama Lilla Would is the first album by German singer–songwriter Vanessa Petruo. It differs from her previous work, replacing her indie pop sound with a mixture of soul, funk, alternative rock and baroque pop. It was released on 25 November 2005 by Universal Island. Primarily produced by the Oja Tunes, it failed to enter the top 100 of the German Albums Chart. Its lead single, "Hot Blooded Woman", peaked at #59 on the Media Control Charts.[1] Petruo's previous single, "Drama Queen", which peaked at #11,[1] was not included on the album.
In 2001, Petruo became a member of popular German girl group No Angels,[2] which disbanded in 2003.[3] She was the first member of No Angels to launch a solo career. In 2004, she released her first single, "Drama Queen", which reached #11 in Germany,[1] #35 in Austria[4] and #88 in Switzerland.[5] Another single, "Pop That Melody", produced by Mousse T, was planned. The music video was shot but, like "Drama Queen", it was pulled back due to differences in style with Mama Lilla Would.
In 2004, Petruo wanted to release a pop album with the working title The Faces of Drama.[6] Besides "Drama Queen" and "Pop That Melody", eight more songs were planned for the album: "Army of Me", "Time Has Changed", "Don't Mess With This Latina", "Dear Man in the Moon", "Warrior of Light", "What the Hell Is This?", "Call Dr. Music" and "Wind Me Up". Almost all of these were later uploaded on Petruo's official MySpace page.[7] "What the Hell Is This?" was eventually re–written in a more soul style and became "Hot Blooded Woman", while "What the Hell Is This?" eventually became one of the lines of the new song.[8] "Call Dr. Music" was also included on the album. Originally written as a pop song, it was re–written and arranged as a soul song.
15 songs were recorded for Mama Lilla Would, including "Miss Celie's Blues", written by Lionel Richie and Quincy Jones. Four more songs were recorded but not used: "What God Likes on Me", "Enemy", "I Wish You Love" and "End of the Road", the cover version of Boyz II Men's song. "End of the Road" was included exclusively on the BRAVO: Come Together compilation album. Most of the songs are available on Petruo's MySpace page.[7] Petruo wrote and composed most of the album's songs, helped by several songwriters. Thorsten Brötzmann and Alex Geringas, who wrote "Drama Queen",[9] wrote one song, "Call Dr. Music".
Though the album was commercially unsuccessful, it was well–received by music critics. The German edition of Amazon.com gave it 4.5 stars out of five.[10] Laut.de gave it three out of five stars, stating that it "had the potential" and describing the song as "original".[11] It also received six out of ten stars at the CDStars.[12]