Soul Flower is the sixth studio album by the American recording group En Vogue. Released through 33rd Street and Funkigirl Records and distributed by Bayside Entertainment on February 24, 2004 in the United States, the album marked the band's debut with the label as well as their first full-length release to feature vocals by new band member Rhona Bennett who had joined remaining founding members Terry Ellis and Cindy Herron the year before following the departure of Amanda Cole, resulting into the partial re-recording of several songs on Soul Flower that Cole had originally lent her voice to.

Soul Flower
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 24, 2004
Recorded2003–2004
GenreR&B
Label
Producer
En Vogue chronology
The Gift of Christmas
(2002)
Soul Flower
(2004)
Electric Café
(2018)
Singles from Soul Flower
  1. "Losin' My Mind"
    Released: 2004
  2. "Ooh Boy"
    Released: 2004

The trio reteamed with longtime contributors Denzil Foster and Thomas McElroy to work on most of the album, with additional production coming from Troy Johnson, Dwayne Morgan, Phillips Scott, Marlon McClain, and songwriting collective Trackheadz. Upon its release, Soul Flower debuted at number 47 on the US Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and number 15 on the Independent Albums charts, making it the band's lowest-chart album to date. In support of it, two singles, including "Losin' My Mind" and "Ooh Boy", were released.

Background edit

In 2000, En Vogue released their fourth studio album Masterpiece Theatre, their second project as a trio following the departure of original member Dawn Robinson in 1997. A commercial disappointment, it underperformed and was considered a drop from their previous effort EV3 (1997),[1] resulting in the release of no further singles after the weak commercial performance of the project.[2] Instead, En Vogue were soon dropped from Elektra.[3] The following year, Amanda Cole was added as a performing member to the band, but soon after original member Maxine Jones announced her desire to spend more time with her young daughter and departed.[3] Soon after, the band collaborated with producer Timothy Eaton on the Christmas album The Gift of Christmas, released through Eaton's Discretion Records in 2002.[3]

2004 marked the return of En Vogue with a new album and a new lineup. Original members Terry Ellis and Cindy Herron are joined by new member, actress and singer Rhona Bennett. The new line-up continued to showcase En Vogue's trademark harmonies, adding a mature attitude that's still sexy and strong. Bennett replaced Amanda Cole who recorded ten of the fifteen tracks with Herron and Ellis; these would later be re-recorded with Bennett who replaced all of Cole's leads on the album.[4] Five additional tracks were then added to complete the album. The song "Stop" as well as the lead single "Losin' My Mind" were brought in by Bennett, "Ez-a-Lee" was an additional track added by the group's new management, while "Ooh Boy" and "New Day Calling'" were brought to the project by the record company.

Release and reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [5]
Ebony     [6]
USA Today    [7]

Soul Flower received generally mixed reviews from music critics. David Jeffries from AllMusic felt that the album "benefits from more of an eye on the groove than on the charts and better than ever tricks from longtime producers Denzil Foster and Thomas McElroy." He added that while "this isn't a return to form [...] Soul Flower finds the band revitalized, learned, and with a whole new set of opportunities in front of them."[5] In his review for USA Today, Steve Jones described the album as "a more mature, soulful outfit. The harmonies are as pristine as ever, and they are still putting lame guys in check, but they seem to have mellowed a bit."[7]

Following its release, Soul Flower debuted at number 47 on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and number 15 on the Independent Albums chart in the United States. It became the En Vogue's first album neither to reach the top forty of the former not to chart on the Billboard 200. Altogether, Soul Flower produced two singles, including "Losin' My Mind" and "Ooh Boy," the latter of which reached Billboard's Bubbling Under charts.

Track listing edit

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Losin' My Mind"
Johnson3:13
2."Ez-A-Lee"
  • Dwayne Morgan
  • Phillips Scott
  • Morgan
  • Scott
3:03
3."Ooh Boy"
Foster & McElroy3:33
4."All You See"
  • Foster & McElroy
3:29
5."Dissed Him"
  • Benjamin
  • Meyers
4:29
6."Ooh La La"
  • Track Headz
3:38
7."I Do Love You (Piece of My Love)"
  • Foster & McElroy
4:24
8."Stop"
  • Foster
  • Scott
  • Bennett
  • McElroy
  • Foster & McElroy
2:51
9."Heaven"
  • Herron
  • Foster
  • Ellis
  • McElroy
  • Foster & McElroy
4:01
10."Everyday"
  • Foster & McElroy
4:16
11."Nearly Lost"
  • Arvel McClinton
  • Curtis Wilson
  • Ngai McGee
  • Trackheadz
3:12
12."Million Different Ways"
  • John Webb
  • Marlon McClain
  • Matt Theriault
  • McClain
  • Theriault
3:29
13."Careful"
  • Herron
  • Foster
  • Jara Harris
  • McClain
  • Ellis
  • McElroy
  • Harris
  • McClain
3:02
14."How Do I Get Over"
  • Foster
  • Marshall
  • McElroy
  • Foster & McElroy
4:06
15."New Day Callin'"
  • Dorian Cheah
  • Robert Ventura
  • Foster & McElroy
4:11

Personnel edit

Credits are taken from the album's liner notes.

  • Vocals – Cindy Herron, Terry Ellis, Rhona Bennett
  • Drum ProgrammingDenzil Foster, Dillion Gorman, Jara Harris, Phillip Scott, Sauce, Thomas McElroy, Troy Johnson
  • Guitar – Dwayne Wiggins, Earl Cooney, Kenya, Markus Henderson, Marlon McClain, Steve Counter
  • Electric Bass – Jaime Brewer
  • Violin – Dorian Cheah
  • Engineer – Phillip Scott, Steve Counter
  • Keyboards – Denzil Foster, Dillion Gorman, Jara Harris, Matt Theriault, Phillip Scott, Robbi Nevell, Rochad Holiday, Sauce, Thomas McElroy, Troy Johnson
  • Percussion – Ricky Cambell
  • Executive producer – Cindy Herron, Denzil Foster, Terry Ellis, Thomas McElroy
  • Producer – Denzil Foster & Thomas McElroy, Troy Johnson, Dwayne Morgan, Dave Meyers, Mo Benjamin, Marlon McClain & Matt Theriault, Jara Harris

Charts edit

Chart (2004) Peak
position
US Independent Albums (Billboard)[8] 15
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[9] 47

References edit

  1. ^ Martinez, Ana (May 1, 2003). "Arithmetricks". Vibe. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  2. ^ O'Keefe, Meghan (July 31, 2013). "Bach & Roll: 10 Modern Songs Written By Classical Composers". VH1. Archived from the original on June 29, 2022. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Harrison, Quentin (March 23, 2017). "INTERVIEW: En Vogue's Cindy Herron-Braggs, Forever a Funky Diva". Albumism. Retrieved February 10, 2018.
  4. ^ "Soul Flower" by En Vogue - Songs, Reviews, Credits - Allmusic
  5. ^ a b Jeffries, David. En Vogue - Soul Flower review at AllMusic. Retrieved 2016-10-11.
  6. ^ Norment, Lynn. The Funky Divas Are Back in Stride. Ebony, Mar-2004
  7. ^ a b Jones, Steve. Music: Reviews En Vogue Soul Flower. USAToday, Feb-23-2004
  8. ^ "En Vogue Chart History (Independent Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved February 5, 2018.
  9. ^ "En Vogue Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved February 5, 2018.