| Call off the Search | 
enlarge | Artist: Katie Melua Label: Umvd Labels Category: Music
List Price: $13.98 Buy Used: $0.99 You Save: $12.99 (93%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 63 reviews Sales Rank: 7882
Format: Enhanced Media: Audio CD Discs: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.4 x 4.9 x 0.4
MPN: 000266612 UPC: 602498625569 EAN: 0602498625569 ASIN: B000255LB6
Release Date: June 8, 2004 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: 100% GUARANTEED! Fast shipping on more than 1,000,000 Book, Video, Video Game & Music titles all in one location! Discover Your Entertainment at goHastings.
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| Tracks:
| • | Call Off the Search | | • | Crawling Up a Hill - Katie Melua, Mayall, John | | • | The Closest Thing to Crazy | | • | My Aphrodisiac Is You | | • | Learnin' the Blues - Katie Melua, Silver, Delores J | | • | Blame It on the Moon | | • | Belfast (Penguins and Cats) - Katie Melua, Melua, Katie | | • | I Think It's Going to Rain Today - Katie Melua, Newman, Randy | | • | Mockingbird Song | | • | Tiger in the Night | | • | Faraway Voice - Katie Melua, Melua, Katie | | • | Lilac Wine - Katie Melua, Shelton, James |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Call Off the Search was released in the U.K. in November 2003 to deserved acclaim, alongside countless declarations that this 19-year-old British music school-educated, Russian-born singer is "the next Norah." There are similarities--Melua does work within a jazz/blues idiom, is talented beyond her years, and concentrates more on classics than her own material (ten are covers and two originals). But she's far more of a classic showbiz type singer than the sultry and sophisticated-sounding Jones. On the single "The Closest Thing to Crazy," for instance, Melua's phrasing is pure show tune. But it works for her, as it did for Lena and Liza before. The only weak link resides in a few straightahead blues songs, notably the 12-bar stomp "My Aphrodisiac Is You." Melua has the talent, she just lacks the soul to put oomph into a song that namechecks the Kama Sutra (this is as it should be, of course, as she's a teenager, but the choice of material is suspect nonetheless). Melua is a great torch singer who deserves the spotlight; odds are you'll eagerly await her next album before you're even done listening to this one all the way through. --Mike McGonigal
Album Description Call Off The Search is the 2003 debut album from Georgia born singer/songwriter Katie Melua. The album is a mix of contemporary adult pop, jazz, blues and world music. This limited special bonus edition features a PAL DVD recorded film called Katie Melua
Album Details She Comes from the European State of Georgia (Via Belfast). 19-year-old Singer Katie Melua is Often Compared by the UK Press as the "New Norah Jones". She was Discovered by Musical Impresario Mike Batt (Art Garfunkel, David Essex, Justin Hayward, the Wombles) , who Praised her Freshness and Originality. This Album Zoomed to the Top of the UK Album Chart at the Start of 2004. The Disc is Enhanced with a Short Video Document of the Singer's Rise to Fame.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 58 more reviews...
Melua give Easy Listening a new edge October 7, 2004 38 out of 43 found this review helpful
In the past couple of years, genre revivals have been more than evident. Soul, rock and pop have all had a call-back from the past. The most recent genre to receive the modern facelift is easy listening. With Norah Jones getting so much recognition for her debut, it seems that the queen of laze should be credited for her efforts. Even with all its disappointments and utter lack of quality, Jones' Come Away With It won five Grammies and myriad of loving critics. However, everyone seemed to forget KD Lang's previous efforts, such as the classy Drag and the effervescent Invincible Summer, both albums that delivered easy listening with a modern edge. Of course, after a revival has proven its success, an influx is bound to follow. Currently Jamie Cullum, Michael Buble and, our subject, Katie Melua all hope to carry the same flag. It is a musical crime to call Melua "the next Norah Jones" because, quite frankly, this Russian-born chanteuse can easily kick Jones' gluteus maximus. One track on Melua's debut Call off the Search, "Blame It on the Moon," manages to cram more emotion than the entirety of Jones' catalogue. Moreover, her voice is more direct and less lethargic, as demonstrated on lead single "Closest Thing to Crazy" and the title track. With her smooth ballads, Melua captures urban life in her anthems of lost love and solitude - it's as if the rush of the city is behind her, but all she could think about is her emotional being on "I Think It's Going to Rain Today." Other tracks continue in that fashion, with "Belfast" and the country-tinted "Mockingbird." Then Melua visits the haunting with the closing track "Lilac Wine," which closes off the complete effort with a satisfactory note. "My Aphrodisiac Is You" could have been eliminated as a b-side along with "Tiger in the Night," however, standout tracks like the magnificent somber of "Crawling up a Hill," all with a London attitude, make up for the mishap. Melua is the one to look out for. Whether it is a drenching or dry song, when it comes to easy listening, this eighteen year old has got it going on.
Call off the search-I found another sweet songbird February 4, 2005 27 out of 27 found this review helpful
In the footsteps of Norah Jones and other new jazz-blues artists comes Katie Melua. Like Norah, she's pretty with those large dark eyes and dark hair. Melua's voice though is of a more girlish and sugary Karin Peris of Innocence Mission-ish tone instead of the crystal clear calmness of Ms. Jones. Melua, who also plays guitar, has Mike Batt as producer, writer of six songs, pianist, and organist on her debut album, Call Off The Search and uses more lush strings on her songs than Jones. For someone looking for something soothing and mellow, check her out.
Indeed, the slow melodic piano, violin, and orchestra on the title track veers more towards the jazz/easy listening side. The title has to do with now that she's found that one, to call off the search. The John Mayall-penned "Crawling Up A Hill" is more on the bluesy side, with jazzy piano arrangements that may be at home on an early Sting solo album, and bewails the tedium of a boring job, where she feels like "my life is like a slow train crawling up a hill."
"How can happiness feel so wrong? How can misery feel so sweet?" sings Katie on the melodic jewel ballad of this crown, "The Closest Thing To Crazy." The strings add to the sadness of the aftermath of an affair, where she discovers the link between "being close to craziness and being close to you."
The humorous "My Aphrodisiac Is You" is a languid piano blues tune where Katie dismisses the rhino horns, Spanish Fly, opium, rubber gloves, or the Kama Sutra, and instead warbles the title. It's a close cousin to Nancy Sinatra's cover of "Let's Fall In Love." Katie strums away on another blues-inflected tune, "Mockingbird Song," although the horns steer it more towards jazz.
Upon hearing the line "the blues will taunt you constantly when you're out in a crowd" in the café ballad "Learnin' The Blues," I remembered the Christmas holidays of 2003, the time heralding my breakdown. Yes indeed, "when you feel your heart break, you're learning the blues."
Another Norah-like tune is "Blame It On The Moon." She does a nice cover of Randy Newman's "I Think It's Going To Rain Today," which with its strings and piano arrangements, make this a highlight. And her closing tune, James Shelton's "Lilac Wine," is a haunting number, on how drinking the sweet and heady lilac wine will make one see what one wants to see, and oh yes, unsteady.
Katie writes two tunes, "Belfast (Penguins and Cats)" an acoustic guitar ballad, and her high note reminds me of Maria McKee, and her tribute to Eva Cassidy, "Faraway Voice." In "Belfast," the idea is how important it is to live, "being able to fly" unlike a penguin, and "dying nine times," in other words living it for all it's worth. As for the other, keep in mind that it was only after Eva Cassidy died of cancer in 1996 at age 33 that she found an audience. "Are you over those hills?/Do you still hum the old melodies?/Do you wish people listened?" she sings, in line with that. Another highlight. And "Tiger In The Night" is another sweet string-laden ballad that may owe as its influence the poem by William Blake, "tiger burning bright/deep in the forest of my night."
Some may dismiss her because she only writes two songs here, as opposed to Norah Jones, but Mike Batt's arrangements, Katie's girlish voice and the way she uses it to evoke the emotions of the songs, and the strings supporting her, do her justice. A great opening shot from Ms. Melua-here's someone with great potential, and maybe someone Renee Olstead should take pointers from. Keep'em coming, Katie!
EXQUISITE!!! January 1, 2006 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
I've always been into female vocalists, especially those with a sweet beautiful voice (Frente, Sarah Brightman, the Cardigans to name a few)... I ran into Katie Melua while shopping for some other music, taken readily by her beauty. Took a listen to some of the clips and I was sold! Her voice is amazing!!! And, her music is very relaxing, soothing, too! I can't remember the last time I have heard a voice as pure as Katie's... DEFINITE buy 8))
Phenomenal voice!!! May 6, 2006 13 out of 13 found this review helpful
Katie Melua has a very unique and beautiful voice. I only found out about her, because of James Blunt, who is another newcomer with wonderful voice and great music. I recently got Katie's CD, and I just love how easy and comfortable she sings. Not forced at all. She's in the same gendre as Norah Jones, but I think Katie has a better voice and sound. My favorites so far in this cd, after listening twice are "The Closest thing to Crazy" & "My Aphrodisiac is you." I'm definitely buying her other CD, "Piece by Piece." I'm very satisfied with this CD, and I'm hoping to see her live performance.
Awesome singer! June 13, 2004 12 out of 14 found this review helpful
This is the best new CD I've heard so far this year! I first saw Katie Melua perform live on a late-night TV show the other day. She did a terrific song called "The Closest Thing To Crazy". When she was finished, she received a huge ovation from the studio audience, and the host told the viewers to "go out and get her CD, before all your friends do". I decided to act on his recommendation, and I'm certainly glad I did! When I heard Katie sing for the first time, I couldn't help but think of 40s/50s pop and jazz singers like Lena Horne - singing into an old "salt shaker" microphone at the old Brooklyn Paramount Theater. (She's HOW old?!) She really does have a lot of that "classic pop" sound and style. Among my favorite songs on the album are "The Closest Thing To Crazy", "Blame It On the Moon", and the title track, "Call Off the Search". The uptempo blues song "Crawlin' Up A Hill" is also a refreshing change of pace, and I particularly like Katie's rendition of Frank Sinatra's "Learning the Blues"as well. I think that fans of Norah Jones and Dido would enjoy this album very much (as I did).
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