To Whom It May Concern

To Whom It May Concern

Category: (Music)

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Editorial Reviews

Japanese edition of her debut album features three bonus tracks, 'Excuse Me', 'Savior' (hidden track), & the video for the first hit single, 'Lights Out'. Also includes Lisa Marie Presley's behind-the-scenes look at the making of her video. 14 tracks (including hidden track & video) in all. Toshiba-EMI.

Blessed--or is it cursed?--with a visage that's a distinctly haunting echo of her father's, Lisa Marie Presley has either spent most of her adult life assiduously avoiding a music career or engaged in Machiavellian schemes to secure one, depending on your spin source. But here it is, informed by no small amount of tabloid-ready living (three failed marriages, including two bizarre years the King's daughter spent playing Princess of Pop to Michael Jackson) and a slate of modern record-biz heavy hitters. The album's first single, "Lights Out," is a countryfied pop collaboration with Glen Ballard in which the singer's tough, bittersweet lyrics obliquely confront the daunting legacy of her father and the Memphis where her "family's buried and gone." Her husky alto isn't the only thing that recalls Sheryl Crow; the bristling textures of Andy Slater (Wallflowers) and Eric Rosse (Tori Amos) are a veritable textbook of modern-rock techniques, wed to some smart cover choices that bolster her music's moody, introspective bent. But that gloss sometimes makes Presley seem like a guest artist on her own album, making one curious to hear her in the setting where her father was so often riveting: Alone in the spotlight. They don't call it the gene pool lottery for nothing. –Jerry McCulley

Customer Reviews

I loved it

Reviewed by A. You, 2009-09-29

I love her voice and the lyrics she wrote were amazing. On this album you'll find songs about her children Riley and Benjamin Keough, her father Elvis, ex-husband Michael Jackson, and ex-husband Danny Keough...to name a few.

Whatever

Reviewed by Sparklicious, 2009-02-18

I didn't even buy this album nor did I buy her second album. This album only went to no.5 on the Billboard Charts in 2003 and why? because she kept telling everybody who interviewed her and her family and friends said this too how Michael Jackson used and manipulated her and how the marriage itself was a publicity stunt and how he was the biggest mistake of her life and we all know that bashing Michael Jackson is getting popular by the minute because of the allegations of child abuse from both 93 and 03 not to mention what Vilitgo did to him. but anyway to me she was either getting sympathy from both Elvis fans and Michael Jackson haters for Michael's behavior towards her or she was just bashing him just to sell this album and if so? best to believe karma is a b**tch and it will come back to her one day and yes I'm saying she's only bringing his name up to sell albums even if she's remarried and have twin baby girls with her current husband and no matter what she does sing, write a book or act? she'll always be known as Elvis' daughter and Michael Jackson and Nicolas Cage's ex-wife and I'm sorry to all you Lisa Marie and Elvis fans but it's the truth!

I applaud the effort, but collection falls short

Reviewed by Paul A. Kirwan, 2008-10-29

Like most previous reviewers, I bought this out of curiousity. I am a big fan of the King and thought that I should buy this out of respect for Lisa-Marie, who has big shoes to fill and a lot at stake if she fails. 'Light's On' is a good gutsy pop song and deserved a charting and 'So Lovely' is subtly delivered, showing that she can operate on different levels, but the rest left me confused. The voice is just ok and the production (given the calibre of producers on this album) is not good. Her voice is husky and in some places I struggle to hear the lyrics. The remainder of the songs are just mediocre. I'm sorry to all other reviewers who gave this a good rating, but I just don't see it. It is just a mediocre album from a very average singer. I applaud her for the effort. it must have been daunting (hence, the 2 stars).

A surprising debut.

Reviewed by Camilo Rueda Lopez, 2008-08-14

After listening for the first time, it can't be denied it comes as a surprise this album is really good indeed... however, this is a very interesting and quite explanatory example of how important production is over the music industry.

I guess that about 80% of the whole album's success is due to the carefully mastered sound production, on both the instrumentation and voices, including the overdubbed background vocals. They achieved much more on the console than on the writing and the creatives, though these can't be underestimated anyway.

It might be disappointing for those waiting to hear any reminiscent of Elvis on her daughter's voice and music style. None of those can be found accross the whole the album... It's much more a dark ambience sexy-voice folk-ish gothic styled, rather than rockabilly or standard mainstream pop.

Think about a kind of Evanescence-meets-Sheryl Crow.

Good debut or, at least, good enough for escaping a little from the shadows on her past marriages and other unfortunate occurrences in the media.

Glad I bought it

Reviewed by elvisfan12, 2008-06-30

I'm not a musician so I can't comment on who produced what or what should have been louder or softer. I will say I had to listen closely to hear and understand her on some songs. But I do know I love her voice and some of her songs made me cry for her (and our) loss. I have already ordered her second CD, I hope it is at least as good.