Right Out of Nowhere explained

Right Out of Nowhere
Type:studio
Artist:Kathy Mattea
Cover:Kathy Mattea--Right Out of Nowhere.jpg
Length:47:55
Label:Narada
Producer:Kathy Mattea
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Right Out of Nowhere is a studio album by American country artist, Kathy Mattea. It was released on September 27, 2005 via Narada Productions and was the fourteenth studio album in her career. The disc featured 11 tracks of original material, all of which were self-produced by Mattea herself. The album was developed from her own personal struggles that helped create a variety of musical styles onto the project. The disc received positive reception at the time of its release and charted on the American country albums chart.

Background

Kathy Mattea was considered among the "most respected female country stars of her era", according to Steve Huey of AllMusic.[1] During the eighties and nineties decades, 40 of Mattea's singles reached the American country songs chart, four of which went to the number one spot.[2] After nearly two decades of commercial success, Mattea left her longtime Nashville label in favor of the independent company, Narada Productions.[3] Her first Narada project was 2002's Roses.[1]

Following the album's release, Mattea lost her father to cancer and her mother to Alzheimer's disease. During the same period, she temporarily separated from her husband, songwriter Jon Vezner. The pair reconciled and Mattea took her grief into the recording of her next Narada project titled, Right Out of Nowhere.[3] According to Mattea, the album was built off an acoustic sound she developed from being on tour with her long-time guitarist, Bill Cooley. "It gave us a sound and a point of view, and we decided to make this record acoustically," she recounted.[2]

Recording and content

Right Out of Nowhere was cut in a live format during a six-month time span. "We sat in a circle in the studio, and put mikes up and let things bleed through, and didn't worry about putting people in isolation booths," Mattea remembered.[2] The album was produced entirely by Mattea herself at seven different recording studios: High Horse, Highlands Digital, King's Wood, Mick's Mix, Minnesota Man's Studios, Playground Studios and Pure Music. With the exception of one studio based in Charlotte, North Carolina, the album was recorded at studios in Nashville, Tennessee. A total of 11 tracks comprised the disc.[4] The album featured three covers: The Rolling Stones's "Gimme Shelter", John Fogerty's "Down on the Corner" and the gospel spiritual "Wade in the Water". One track was co-written by Mattea, "Give It Away" (co-written with Bob Halligan Jr. and Jon Vezner).[4] The song was based on a real-life event when Mattea met musician Keb' Mo' for the first time. Another track, "Love's Not Through with Me Yet", was based on Mattea's relationships that were "rebuilt from the ground up".[5]

Release, singles and critical reception

Right Out of Nowhere was released through Narada Productions on September 27, 2005. It was originally distributed as a compact disc, but was later released to digital sites such as Apple Music.[4] [6] The album spent one week on America's Billboard Top Country Albums chart, peaking at number 73 in October 2005. To date, it is her lowest charting disc on the country albums chart.[7] One single was spawned from the project: "Live It". The single was issued as a compact disc with two tracks: a radio edit and the original album version.[8]

Right Out of Nowhere was met with positive reception from critics and journalists. Thom Jurek of AllMusic rated the project 3.5 out of five stars and concluded, "Mattea is one of those singers who can do anything she likes; her emotive phrasing and willingness to stretch herself are commendable, and Right Out of Nowhere is one of her most ambitious outings yet." Matt Cibula of PopMatters gave the album a six out of ten rating. He found Mattea to resemble that of a folk singer rather than that of a country singer. Cibula praised the album's song selection and her vocals, noting a change in her vocal performance since her last album release. He concluded by saying, "Kathy Mattea is making me feel better in this shitty world. It’s a good record, it’s a clean record, it’s a pretty record." The Chicago Tribune noted Mattea's eclectic mix of styles in the album, saying, "Twenty years into her career, Kathy Mattea continues surprising audiences with her genre jumping."

Personnel

All credits are adapted from the liner notes of Right Out of Nowhere and AllMusic.[4] [9]

Musical personnel

Technical personnel

Release history

RegionDateFormatLabelRef.
Australia and EuropeSeptember 27, 2005Compact discNarada Productions[10]
North America
2000sDigital

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Huey . Steve . Kathy Mattea Biography . . 19 November 2022.
  2. News: Kahn Special . Brenda . The bitter has turned sweet for singer-songwriter Kathy Mattea . 21 November 2022 . . August 9, 2006.
  3. News: Harrington . Richard . Hard Times Can't Keep Mattea Down . 21 November 2022 . . November 4, 2005.
  4. Mattea . Kathy . Right Out of Nowhere (CD Album Liner Notes and Information) . . September 27, 2005 . 72438-75736-2-8.
  5. Web site: Gilbert . Calvin . Kathy Mattea Explores Life's Journey Singer-Songwriter Ponders Eternal Questions in 'Right Out of Nowhere' . https://web.archive.org/web/20221121011811/https://www.cmt.com/news/j5usk7/kathy-mattea-explores-lifes-journey . dead . November 21, 2022 . . 21 November 2022.
  6. Web site: Right Out of Nowhere by Kathy Mattea . . 21 November 2022.
  7. Web site: Kathy Mattea chart history (Country Albums) . . 21 November 2022.
  8. Mattea . Kathy . "Live It" (Radio Single) / "Live It" (Album Version) [CD Single] . . 2005 . 09463-43755-2-8.
  9. Web site: Right Out of Nowhere: Kathy Mattea: Credits . . 19 November 2022.
  10. Mattea . Kathy . Right Out of Nowhere (Australia and Europe CD Information) . . September 27, 2005 . 09463-35715-2-5.