Maxwell Now Album Zip



Biography

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Maxwell is one of the standout neo-jazz performers who rose to prominence in the second half of the nineties. This musician was born on May 23, 1973 in Brooklyn, NY. This artist’s real name is kept in secret to guarantee his family’s privacy. The future star lost his father who died in a plane crash when the boy was only three. Soon, Maxwell began singing as a member of the Baptist church. But he did not take music seriously until he turned seventeen when the young man began writing his own material using the simplest and cheapest synthesizer. Considering him too shy for an artistic career, his peers prophesized him a great failure. However, it was early in the nineties when Maxwell became a regular participant of R&B events at NY clubs. After Maxwell was taken up as an official stage name, the musician signed up a contract with Columbia.

Maxwell Albums And Songs

  • In August 2001, Maxwell was though with his third full-length album,Now, strongly similar to his debut work thank to the same romantic atmosphere. The album debuted first in the charts with its lead-single Lifetime released soon afterwards. Following that, Maxwell’s career sank into a long period of silence.
  • Now by Maxwell: Listen to songs by Maxwell on Myspace, a place where people come to connect, discover, and share.
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Maxwell’s debut record was made in 1994 and was a result of the young artist’s hard work in cooperation with some other, more experienced, colleagues. Called Urban Hang Suite it bore a strong influence by Prince. At that time, such music was leaving into oblivion giving its positions to hip-hop, which made the label’s management think many times before actually releasing the album. In the long run, it was issued only in 1996 and did not sell nicely in the beginning. The breaking point was reached after the release of the album’s second single, Ascension (Never Wonder). It took the long-play only a couple of months to earn the platinum status and bring its maker a Grammy nomination.

Maxwell’s subsequent official release was an acoustic EP recorded during his unplugged performance at MTV. This work pleased far more than only R&B listeners since the musician decided to perform some compositions originally made in completely different genres. Such were This Woman's Work, and Closer. The acoustic version of Whenever, Wherever, Whatever granted the singer with the Grammy nomination for Best Pop Vocal. All this made Maxwell’s follow-up album highly anticipated. Entitled Embrva, it arrived in 1998 and collected mixed reviews. Some of the critics believed that the artist preferred commercial prosperity to creative evolution. In 1999, Maxwell recorded his, arguably, best song so far named Fortunate as part of the soundtrack to Life. The popular magazine Billboard placed this composition on the number one position in R&B chart. The same year, the musician made two more songs for the movie called The Best Man.

In August 2001, Maxwell was though with his third full-length album,Now, strongly similar to his debut work thank to the same romantic atmosphere. The album debuted first in the charts with its lead-single Lifetime released soon afterwards. Following that, Maxwell’s career sank into a long period of silence. He resurfaced only in 2008 singing Simply Beautiful at the BET Awards ceremony. In a short while, Maxwell gave a streak of impressive concerts making it clear that he was in perfect shape and ready to present his new studio work. It was issued in the summer of 2009 under the title BLACKsummers'night. The singer said that it was the first part of the trilogy he designed. The success of its first single, Pretty Wings, convinced listeners and experts that Maxwell was full of energy and ideas heading with bright future ahead.

Studio Albums

BLACKsummers'night
US neo-soul singer Maxwell broke the eight-year-long silence with the album BLACKsummers'night. This nine-track collection is the first part of a trilogy and demonstrates us the perfect shape of the artist
5

Lives

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Boston Herald review[edit]

Partial transcription using Google News Advanced News Archive Search. Boston Herald (Rodman, Sarah. S.23. August 31, 2001) review of Now (2001):

MAXWELL 'Now' (Columbia) four stars (out of four). Prince doesn't make truly terrific Prince albums anymore. Don't despair. Maxwell is doing it for him. On his third Minneapolis-scented release, 'Now,' Maxwell continues to distinguish himself from the current glut of overwrought and under- erotic r & b lotharios with his retro, almost absurdly soulful ways. Organic funk, steamy slow jams and spiritually searching ballads all benefit from the Brooklyn native's achingly sexy voice, which slides from bedroom growl to feathery falsetto in a note's time. In the album's most stunning passage, Maxwell reprises his cover of Kate Bush's stark yet hopeful 'This Woman's Work' from his 'Unplugged' set, ... 'Now' would be a good time to get this album.

— Sarah Rodman

Dan56 (talk) 22:03, 25 September 2009 (UTC)

Washington Post review[edit]

Partial transcription using Google News Advanced News Archive Search. The Washington Post (Wiltz, Teresa. C.01. August 22, 2001) review of Now (2001):

Maxwell's Urban Hang Suite

Slip a Maxwell disc into the CD player, and you know pretty much what you're going to get: moody musings on the nature of love and loss, slinky bass lines designed to get rumps to rockin', lots and lots of yearning and please, baby, please, baby, please baby baby please . . . You expect this. After all, this is the brother who elevated begging to a fine art, the man who crooned ever so sweetly in his debut CD, 'You're the highest of the high / And if you don't know then I'll say it / So don't ever wonder.' In his world, women rule. They are mysterious beings at once worthy of worship and capable of crushing a sensitive sort with one well-placed dig of a stilettoed heel. And [Maxwell] is nothing if not sensitive: Sexuality is sacred; carnality the means through which lovers can find transcendence. In contrast to the bump-and-grind, pimps-and-hos sensibility of so much that's masquerading as music on our airwaves, Maxwell wants to play for keeps. As he sang in 1996's 'Suitelady,' 'I never thought I would ever / Want matrimony forever / But you brought that Suite deep familiar / Let's get married.'

It's a formula that has worked, backed by the collaboration of Sade's saxophonist/producer Stuart Matthewman and ace guitarist Wah Wah Watson, both of whom have played on all his albums. Maxwell's wistful whispers pushed him up front and center of the neo-soul movement, keeping company with the likes of D'Angelo, Erykah Badu and Me'Shell Ndege{acute}Ocello. His ethereal falsetto and emotion- wrought phrasings have made him the heir apparent to the godfather of the sensual solicitation, Marvin Gaye. So it was no coincidence -- scary, perhaps, but no coincidence -- that one DC fan confessed to naming her baby Embrya after his somewhat ponderous sophomore CD. With Maxwell's third effort, 'Now,' nothing much has changed. You can't help wishing that every so often now and then he'd break out of the box, stretch beyond his self-imposed limits. He does this to spectacular effect in his sold-out shows, but with his recordings, he seems content to leave everything at a 'Mellosmoothe' simmer. That's too bad, because over the past few years, life has given him plenty of material: He's had his heart broken (again), canceled a couple of concerts for 'personal reasons,' and learned to duck when ladies in the first row start pelting him with panties.

...

In a few cuts, he downplays the head-nodding thump of bass normally underpinning his songs. Instead, he uses a handful of instruments for a minimalist feel, as in the mournful 'Symptom Unknown' and the otherworldly 'This Woman's Work,' a cover of the Kate Bush tune that originally appeared on his 'MTV Unplugged' EP release. This time around, there's room in his universe for joy, like his first single, 'Get To Know Ya,' an effusive old-school jam. Still, even at his most playful, yearning is always the subtext, as he strains for an emotional connection that always seems just beyond his grasp: He's 'gotta get to know ya, longin' to know ya . . .' This for-realness wears thin in spots, relegating his music to little more than pleasant background noise, as with 'Lifetime,' the second single that's currently dominating radio. To be sure, it's terribly sweet and sentimental, but it merely echoes previous ballads. The best cut by far is the haunting, regretful, 'noOne,' where a lover torments himself with the post-breakup shoulda/woulda/couldas: 'I try to forget ya / but you're all I wanna do / I could do better / But there's no one quite like, no one quite like you.' It opens with a classic, '80s synthesizer groove backed by the wah- wah of a wailing guitar and an insistent beat bumping around in the background that spins the listener into a hypnotic state. From there the song builds, with snippets of his voice layered on top of each other, refrain floating over refrain in an eerie echo. Here, Maxwell almost chants the lyrics, repeating them over and over again, the way obsessive thoughts ricochet around the brain of the heartbroken: 'If I made you love me again / If I made you want me again.' If only, if only, love didn't so often equal regret. But then Maxwell would be a man without a mission. (To hear a free Sound Bite from this album, call Post-Haste at 202- 334-9000 and press 8183.)

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Dan56 (talk) 22:44, 25 September 2009 (UTC)

Now

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