The Meaning of Love (album)

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The Meaning of Love
File:Meaning Of Love Michelle McManus.jpg
Studio album by Michelle McManus
Released February 16, 2004 (UK)
Recorded 2003-2004
Genre Pop
Label BMG
Producer Steve Mac

The Meaning of Love is the only album by Scottish pop singer Michelle McManus, issued by BMG. Released on February 16, 2004 in the United Kingdom and Ireland, it was Michelle's first album since winning the UK Talent show Pop Idol in December 2003. It yielded two Top 20 entries on the UK Singles Chart: the chart-topping "All This Time", and the title track, which stalled at #16.

The Meaning of Love met with a strongly negative critical reaction. Although it entered the UK Albums Chart at #3, the record was a commercial disappointment and McManus was dropped by her label.

Reception and legacy

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic 2/5 stars[1]
BBC Music (favourable)[2]
BBC News (unfavourable)[3]
Daily Mail (unfavourable)[4]
Daily Mirror (unfavourable)[5]
entertainment.ie 2/5 stars[6]
The Guardian 2/5 stars[7]
The Herald 1/5 stars[8]
The Scotsman (unfavourable)[9]
The Telegraph (unfavourable)[10]

The Meaning of Love was released to near-unanimous disapproval from the music press, with McManus's vocal abilities being called into question by multiple writers. Lynsey Hanley in The Telegraph wrote: "This whole record smacks of boil-in-the-bag songwriting and lazy, hasty production tarted up with cheesy strings." She stated that McManus's singing "lack[s] any discernible 'wow' factor" and is on par with "a karaoke regular or, at best, a provincial cabaret turn."[10] Guardian journalist Caroline Sullivan also saw McManus's vocals as lacking the "wow" factor, which, she said, "could have enlivened some of these sub-Celine Dion torchers".[7] An entertainment.ie critic said that McManus, whose vocal performances "never rise far above the level of a very average club singer", made fellow reality television music competition winners Will Young and Alex Parks "look like worldbeaters by comparison".[6]

Fiona Shepherd in The Scotsman delivered a track-by-track critical assault of the record in which she described McManus as "another chicken-in-a-basket diva" with an "unremarkable" voice. Shepherd expressed a particular loathing for the cover version of Nina Simone's "Feelin' Good", which according to her, had "the guts ripped out of it."[9] The track was derided by multiple reviewers;[1][3][8] Herald journalist Beth Pearson pointed to this cover as evidence that McManus "just can't sing soulfully", which, combined with the album's "tinny production and synths imported direct from the 1980s", made for a "thoroughly boring, unambitious debut".[8]

Some reviewers, while unfavourable, were more receptive to McManus's vocals. Sharon Mawer in AllMusic saw the bulk of the material as "very bland, tuneless, and unmemorable", but commended McManus's "undoubted talent". She did, however, argue that McManus gained publicity more for "her outsized weight" than her singing.[1] Daily Mirror critic Gavin Martin stressed that she "can actually sing", but observed "some of the most horrifying material ever", with songwriting that is "drowned in cliche, seemingly knocked off with barely a thought".[5] BBC News writer Tom Bishop was impressed by McManus's "soulful" singing on Pop Idol, but felt her vocals sound "muffled and restrained by pedestrian production" on this "dull" album.[3] A Daily Mail reviewer saw McManus as a "talented cabaret singer rather than one with real potential", and said her "ultra-safe" debut record had been "rushed out in haste".[4]

Deviating from critical consensus, BBC Music journalist Ruth Mitchell wrote that the album is "packed full of dreamy songs", and "surprisingly sounds like a very competent and unhurried effort indeed."[2]

The Meaning of Love won "Worst British Album" at the 2005 Naomi Awards.[11] In a 2007 online poll, it was voted the seventh-worst album ever made by a Scottish artist.[12][13]

Chart performance

The album debuted at #3 on the UK Albums Chart on the 22 February 2004.[14] It fell to #14 in its second week and lasted a further three weeks in the UK Top 40.[15] As a result of disappointing sales, McManus was dropped by her record label, BMG.[16]

Track listing

# Title
1. "All This Time" 4:23
2. "The Meaning of Love" 4:24
3. "Say It Isn't So" 4:31
4. "Emotional" 3:43
5. "When The World Is Not Enough" 3:43
6. "Too Fast Too Slow 3:34
7. "Cast The First Stone" 3:36
8. "One Life" 3:36
9. "Feelin' Good" 3:15
10. "How Can Sorry Ever Mend A Broken Heart" 3:08
11. "Invincible" 4:44
12. "Ill Never Know" 4:21
13. "More Than Anything" 3:25
14 "Once In A Lifetime" 4:08

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Chart (2004) Peak
position
UK Albums Chart 3[15]
Irish Album Charts 64[17]
Scottish Album Charts 1[18]

References

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