Karen Carpenter (album) explained

Karen Carpenter
Type:studio
Artist:Karen Carpenter
Cover:Karen Carpenter - Karen Carpenter (1996).png
Released:October 7, 1996
Recorded:May 2, 1979 – January 1980
Genre:Pop, soft rock
Label:A&M
Producer:Phil Ramone

Karen Carpenter is the only solo album by singer/drummer Karen Carpenter of the Carpenters, recorded between 1979 and 1980 and released by A&M Records in 1996.[1]

Background and recording

The album came about when Richard Carpenter, Karen's older brother and musical partner, announced in 1979 that he wanted to take the year off while being treated for an addiction to Quaaludes putting Carpenters on a temporary hold. Karen on the other hand was eager to work and decided to pursue a solo record.[2]

The album was recorded in New York with producer Phil Ramone in 1979 and 1980. Karen was backed by various New York and Los Angeles studio musicians, including John "JR" Robinson,[3] Steve Gadd, Greg Phillinganes, Louis Johnson and members of Billy Joel's band.

Out of the twenty-one songs recorded, only eleven were chosen for the album. The songs on the album were mixed according to Karen Carpenter's instructions.

The production of the album cost $400,000 of Carpenter's own money and $100,000 fronted by A&M Records. The $100,000 fronted by A&M was offset against Carpenters' future album royalties.

Cancellation

A&M executives in New York approved the material, but the executives in Los Angeles, including label owners Herb Alpert and Jerry Moss, responded negatively. Ramone recalls that Carpenter broke down in tears. Devastated, she accepted A&M's urging not to release the album.[4] It was officially announced in May 1980.[1]

Richard Carpenter later said that the decision not to release the album was Karen's, who respected the opinions of A&M executives and others—including him.[5] Several musicians who worked on the album have said that Carpenter very much wanted her album to be released and that it was not her idea or decision to shelve it.[6]

An episode of E! True Hollywood Story profiling Karen Carpenter claims that Herb Alpert called the album "unreleaseable". Quincy Jones championed releasing the album to Derek Green, an A&M Records vice-president, but Alpert, Moss and Green insisted the album had to be canceled.

On February 3, 1983, the day before Carpenter's death, she called Ramone to discuss the album; according to Ramone, Carpenter said, "I hope you don't mind if I curse. I still love our fucking record!"[7] [1]

Posthumous release

The song "Make Believe It's Your First Time" was re-recorded by Carpenters during the sessions for Made in America, but it remained unreleased until the inclusion on Voice of the Heart in 1983.[8]

Four songs from the album ("Lovelines", "If I Had You", "If We Try" and "Remember When Lovin' Took All Night") were later rearranged by Richard Carpenter and included on the Carpenters' 1989 album Lovelines. However, the "If I Had You" single released the same year was credited as Karen Carpenter's solo.[9]

Two additional songs, "My Body Keeps Changing My Mind" and "Still Crazy After All These Years", were featured on Carpenters 1991 box set From the Top.

The album in its original intended form remained shelved until the release in 1996 — thirteen years after Karen Carpenter's death. The reason behind the release was partly due to renewed interest in Carpenters music in the mid 90s and the success of the If I Were a Carpenter tribute album.[2] The liner notes of Karen's album included comments from Richard Carpenter and producer Phil Ramone about the later decision to release it the way Karen approved it. The resulting release included additional twelfth bonus track, "Last One Singin' the Blues".[5]

While the album was being prepared for release, an individual at A&M copied Carpenter's unreleased and unfinished material on a cassette tape and distributed it via a fan club on Yahoo! through the mail. The songs were leaked onto the internet in 2000. Two of the unreleased songs, "I Love Makin' Love to You" and "Truly You" were finished, while the remaining tracks were work leads only and in different stages of completion.

Track listing

Unreleased tracks

The following are a list of songs that Karen Carpenter recorded that never made it onto the album;[1] however, they all circulate via bootlegging circles in studio quality.

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Love Makin' Love to You"Evie Sands, Ben Weisman, Richard Germinaro3:22
2."Don't Try to Win Me Back Again"Carlotta McKee, Gordon Gordy4:38
3."Something's Missing (In My Life)"Jay Asher, Paul Jabara4:43
4."Keep My Lovelight Burnin'"Evie Sands, Ben Weisman3:10
5."Midnight (Never Lets You Down)"Rod Temperton4:13
6."Jimmy Mack"Eddie Holland, Lamont Dozier3:30
7."I Do It for Your Love"Paul Simon3:37
8."Truly You"Russell Javors3:10
9."It's Really You"Alan Tarney, Tom Snow, Trevor Spencer3:21

Personnel

Musicians

Production

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 2024-11-13 . onamrecords.com . Karen Carpenter .
  2. Web site: Karen Carpenter’s ‘Lost’ LP. latimes.com. Jerry. Crowe. August 31, 1996. 2024-11-13.
  3. Web site: Interview with John Robinson . Dmitry M. Epstein . Let It Rock . December 2015 . February 28, 2024.
  4. Coleman, Ray. The Carpenters: The Untold Story. HarperCollins, 1995, page unknown.
  5. Liner notes, Karen Carpenter, by Richard Carpenter
  6. Book: 978-1507772676. The Carpenters Online Interviews. Henry. Rick. Economou. Irene. 30 January 2015. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform .
  7. Ramone, Phil. Making Records: The Scenes Behind the Music. Hyperion, 2007, page unknown.
  8. Web site: ‘Voice Of The Heart’: Karen Carpenter’s Beautiful Swan Song. October 11, 2023. Richard. Havers. September 24, 2024.
  9. Web site: 2024-11-13 . January 13, 2024 . Paul . Sexton . udiscovermusic.com . The Carpenters’ ‘Lovelines’: A Posthumous Tribute To Karen Carpenter .