Neha Patil (Editor)

My Special Love

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Length
  
36:30

Artist
  
La Toya Jackson

Label
  
Polydor Records

My Special Love (1981)
  
Heart Don't Lie (1984)

Release date
  
8 May 1981

My Special Love httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb1

Released
  
May 8, 1981 (1981-05-08)

Recorded
  
December, 1980 – April, 1981

Producer
  
Ollie E. Brown Randy Jackson

Genres
  
Soul music, Rhythm and blues, Pop music

Similar
  
La Toya Jackson albums, Rhythm and blues albums

La toya jackson stay the night


My Special Love is the second studio album by American singer La Toya Jackson. Released on May 8, 1981, The album is one of Jackson's more successful, peaking at #175 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. After the album's limited success, it fell into obscurity, receiving a limited re-release on CD in Japan in the early 1990s, which was quickly deleted. This was the last Jackson album released with Polydor Records.

Contents

La toya jackson my special love


Background

Allmusic called it "the defining album of Jackson's career", also stating that "Though her voice isn't particularly strong, Jackson makes up for what she lacks in power with an energetic, uninhibited approach to the music. Benefiting from solid R&B-funk arrangements and the well-rounded production of Ollie E. Brown, her second album is a flavorful mixture of lively uptempo romps and smooth-sailing slow jams." The first single from the album was "Stay the Night", a cover of the 1980 Billy Ocean single, and was moderately successful. The second and final single was "I Don't Want You to Go", which had a very small release and failed to chart. The album also includes "Giving You Up", a duet with brother Randy, and "Camp Kuchi Kaiai", which features background vocals by sister Janet. The album is the rarest album from LaToya, the other being Stop in the Name of Love (1995).

Songs

1Stay the Night5:33
2Fill You Up5:10
3Giving You Up3:08

References

My Special Love Wikipedia