Toni Braxton And Babyface Album
Simply put, Toni Braxton and Babyface’s duet album, Love, Marriage & Divorce, is a set fans have been waiting on for 20 years. For decades, Face has been the pen behind Toni’s most powerful hits, including “You’re Makin’ Me High,” “You Mean The World to Me,” “Breathe Again”.
Toni Braxton & Babyface – Love, Marriage & Divorce (2014)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/44,1 kHz Time – 43:46 minutes 582 MB Genre: R&B
Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks.com Digital booklet @ Motown
Love, Marriage & Divorce is the latest R&B album featuring Toni Braxton and Kenneth “Babyface” Edmonds. The two first collaborated in 1992 for the single “Give U My Heart,” the soundtrack to the film Boomerang. This is Babyface’s first album release in seven years and Braxton’s first new album since 2010. The album features hits “Hurt You” and “Where Did We Go Wrong”.
On Love, Marriage & Divorce, Toni Braxton and Babyface, creative partners going back to the early ’90s, rekindle their musical relationship. Both endured broken marriages, and presumably it’s those experiences that inform the material here — a succinct collection of 11 songs, eight of which are duets. The emphasis is on divorce, indicated from the very beginning on “Roller Coaster,” where Babyface enters with “Today I got so mad at you, it’s like I couldn’t control myself.” The set finishes with the bittersweet “The D Word,” seemingly a Sade homage, in which Babyface confesses “You still own my heart, forever and ever and ever.” Moments that deviate from issues of romantic strife are few. The duo don’t seem nearly as connected to them. “Sweat,” a slinking groove, is like the “Love During War” to Robin Thicke’s “Love After War,” while “Heart Attack,” near the album’s end, is a retro-disco move that seems more like a throw-in than a crucial part of the album. The sequence of songs plays out like scenes on shuffle. Either that, or the relationship is extremely up and down; the singers sometimes sound as if they are addressing ex-lovers from other relationships. “Reunited” is a blissful ballad, but it’s followed by the embittered “I’d Rather Be Broke,” where Braxton asserts, “Just because your money’s strong don’t mean you can do the things that you do.” Babyface is civil and clear-headed on “I Hope That You’re Okay,” claiming he “can’t go through the motions anymore,” but Braxton follows with a solo spotlight, “I Wish,” that seems drawn from a different situation: “I hope she creeps on you with somebody who is 22/I swear to God, I’m gonna be laughing at you every day.” As a narrative, the album can be hard to follow, but it’s not as if breakups have a simple arc with a steady, unwavering decline. While most of these songs are ballads, Babyface rarely pulls out his acoustic guitar — a saving grace for those who tired of hearing it throughout the ’90s. This is a solid addition to both artists’ discographies. The romantically content won’t want to go anywhere near it.
Tracklist:
01 – Roller Coaster
02 – Sweat
03 – Hurt You
04 – Where Did We Go Wrong?
05 – I Hope That You’re Okay
06 – I Wish
07 – Take It Back
08 – Reunited
09 – I’d Rather Be Broke
10 – Heart Attack
11 – The D Word
Where can i find yeshu dayasagar episode. Download: