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Calling All Lovers

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Download links and information about Calling All Lovers by Tamar Braxton. This album was released in 2015 and it belongs to Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 48:27 minutes.

Artist: Tamar Braxton
Release date: 2015
Genre: Hip Hop/R&B, Soul, Rock
Tracks: 14
Duration: 48:27
Buy on iTunes $10.99
Buy on Songswave €1.58

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Angels & Demons 3:05
2. Catfish 3:33
3. Simple Things 4:20
4. Broken Record 4:09
5. Never 3:09
6. Circles 3:24
7. If I Don't Have You 4:14
8. Raise the Bar 3:43
9. I Love You 2:21
10. Makin' Love 3:44
11. Love It 2:30
12. Must Be Good To You 3:11
13. Free Fallin' 3:36
14. King 3:28

Details

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Tamar Braxton's return to music in 2013 could not have gone much better. Love and War debuted at number two, featured a number one R&B hit and two additional singles that either scraped or peaked near the Top Ten. Three Grammy nominations resulted. Follow-up Calling All Lovers is wrapped up like it offers even more theatrics. Braxton isn't smiling in any of the photos contained in the booklet, which is made to look like a newspaper titled Tamartian Times. (Braxtonian Beacon was likely never considered; "Tamartian" is a nod to her followers). The album starts in scattered fashion with some neo-reggae, a retro-modern midtempo groove that evokes breakbeat-driven early-'90s productions, and a church-ified ballad. After those three songs, the album stabilizes, sliding between a number of plush ballads and sophisticated but bumping slow jams. Heartache prevails during the first half and crests with "Never," an authoritative and elegantly paced kiss-off of an inappreciative lover. The latter half is mostly about devotion and awe, while the back-to-back "Love It" (all booming bass, tapping keyboards, and rattling percussion) and "Must Be Good to You" (light and springy disco-funk) turn it up several degrees with Braxton offering firm declarations of her sexual power. Calling All Lovers doesn't merely offer more than what its packaging suggests. It might not feature a single as big as "Love and War," but it tops that song's parent album.