Murder Love

Murder Love
Murder Love
Studio album by Snow
Released March 28, 1995
Genre Pop, Reggae Fusion
Length 50:97
Label East West Records
Producer MC Shan, Junior Reid, Hurby "Luv Bug" Azor, Michael Warner, John Ficarrotta and others.
Snow chronology
12 Inches of Snow
(1993)
'Murder Love'
(1995)
Justuss
(1997)

Murder Love is Canadian reggae musician Snow’s second album. While his preceding album (12 Inches of Snow) featured a wide array of musical genres fusing hip-hop, pop, and reggae, Murder Love was recorded in Jamaica and primarily featured dancehall tracks. A number of songs featured dancehall legends Ninjaman, Half Pint, White Mice, and Nadine Sutherland, and Junior Reid produced and appeared on the track Si Wi Dem Nuh Know We. While not producing a hit in the United States, the track Sexy Girl reached number one in Japan (becoming the 6th biggest hit of 1995) and the "Anything for You" remix became the top selling single of 1995 in Jamaica.[1][2][3][4] Ultimately, Murder Love reached number one the U.S. Reggae charts and "Si We Dem Nuh Know We" was nominated for a Juno for best reggae recording.[5] Due to his criminal record, Snow was unable to enter the United States and promote the album.[1][2]

Contents

Production

In 1993, Snow began touring Jamaica, performing at such venues as the University of the West Indies, Topline, and the Jaguar Lounge in Halfway Tree. While performing at Sun Splash ’93, Snow befriended Ninjaman and the two began collaborating. As Snow put it, “we just clicked, so now we always hang out. Everyday when I'm in Jamaica I hang with him. When he's doing a track, he'll always invite me to come on it with him." In addition to working with Ninjaman, Snow began recording with one of the artists that influenced his interest in reggae, Junior Reid, who went on to produce the track that also featured Snow and Ninjaman, “Si We Dem Nuh Know We.”[1] Junior Reid also performed as guest vocalist on “Yesterday.” Ninjaman also appeared as a guest vocalist on “Bad Men.” Nadine Sutherland performed on the first single “Anything For You” and Half-Pint performs on the tracks “Rivertown” and joins White Mice on “Time.” The album featured several producers, including Junior Reid (“Si We Dem Nuh Know We”), Onree Gill (“Bad Men,” “Rivertown,” “Babylon,” “Time,” “Dream,” “If You Like the Sound,” and “Let’s Get it on”) , MC Shan (“Yesterday” and “Sexy Girl”) and Herby Azor (“Anything for You” and “Things to Say”).[6]

Ultimately, Snow spent eight months in Jamaica recording the album, and his recording crew, including M.C. Shan, Hurby Azor, and Michael Warner, flew to Jamaica to contribute to the album. Snow professed, "The experience of being in Jamaica definitely shaped the album. When I'm working, I don't listen to other music, for fear of stealing something unconsciously. But down there, you can't get away from music, it's all around you." He also observed, "The forward thing in dancehall reggae now is being positive, not singing all the time about gun talk and women. More than the beats, that had an influence in how the songs came out. Because I was going in that direction, it came together naturally."[7] The name Murder Love materialized after Snow visited Ireland during his European tour in 1994. As Snow explained in 1995, "It's about the IRA (Irish Republican Army). They're killing people they should be loving. I'm saying to Catholics and Protestants, they should be loving because they're one people. I always write words that are hard to understand. You've got to listen. It could mean something different to you, and if it means something different to you that's good. But that's what it means to me." Thus, The Mail and Globe described the track as the "sinisterly named title track, which has a deceptively lovely chorus." [8]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 2/5 stars[9]
Entertainment Weekly (B-)[10]

Upon release, Murder Love met with mixed reviews. Patricia Meschino of Reggae Report praised “Dream” as one of the albums “most satisfying cuts.” She observed, “Here Snow reminisces about his days in Toronto's Allenbury housing project, where he first became acquainted with Reggae through the friendships formed with the many Jamaicans who had moved into his area” and “goes on to describe imagined evenings spent at Kingston's Godfather's nightclub and sessions with the Stone Love sound system.”[1] Heidi Seigmund of the Los Angeles Times wrote, “comparisons to rapper Vanilla Ice were inevitable in '93” but, “aside from being white artists working in black-music genres, the similarities end there.” She went on to observe that “unlike Ice, Snow really is a skilled performer and an exceptional dancehall talent. That's evident on songs like "Anything for You," a buoyant duet with Nadine Sutherland, "Things to Say"--a Bob Marley tribute sampling Bill Withers' "Use Me"--and "Rivertown," a look at a Jamaican ghetto through the eyes of its young residents.” [11]

Chuck Eddy of Spin found Murder Love somewhat indecipherable and a departure from 12 Inches of Snow, writing “slow make out mush replaces the debut’s Algerian-rai/dancehall mix with some lighthearted Marvin Gaye liquid funk,” and “like most reggae toasters, Snow seems to have learned to rap by studying Dick Van Dyke’s ‘hum-diddle-diddle-did-die-hum-diddl-eye’ chimney sweep scat in Mary Poppins. So I can’t guarantee I got the plots of these poems completely right.”[12]

Track listing

  1. "Si Wi Dem Nuh Know We" with Junior Reid & Ninjaman
  2. "Bad Men" with Ninjaman
  3. "Rivertown" with Half Pint
  4. "Murder Love"
  5. "Babylon"
  6. "Anything for You" with Nadine Sutherland
  7. "Yesterday" with Junior Reid
  8. "Time" with White Mice & Half Pint
  9. "Dream"
  10. "If You Like the Sound"
  11. "Sexy Girl"
  12. "Let's Get It On"
  13. "Things to Say"

References

  1. ^ a b c d See Patricia Meschino, Reggae Roots Vol. 13:3 (1995)
  2. ^ a b For U.S. charting see: http://www.allmusic.com/artist/snow-p26072/charts-awards
  3. ^ Jamaican sales and charting data for "Anything For You" can be found in Kevin O'Brien Chang and Wayne Chen, Reggae Routes: The Story of Jamaican music (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1998) 211
  4. ^ For charting in Japan, see: http://www.j-wave.co.jp/original/tokiohot100/cgi-bin/top100.cgi
  5. ^ see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juno_Awards_of_1996.
  6. ^ For credits,see: http://www.allmusic.com/artist/snow-p26072/charts-awards
  7. ^ Lenny Stoute, "Snow melting away from gangsta talk on new disc Rapper says he's seen the folly of his ways," Toronto Star, 16 February 1995, B#
  8. ^ Elizabeth Renzetti, "White on Black: The Rap on Rap," The Globe and Mail, 11 March 1995, 1.
  9. ^ Allmusic review
  10. ^ EW review
  11. ^ Heidi Sigmund, “Snow Shows Off Dance Talent on ‘Love,’” Review of Murder Love, Los Angeles Times, 15 April 1995, 8.
  12. ^ Chuck Eddy, Review of Murder Love, Spin, April 1995, 201

External links


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