Lyrics from Soulife
All Music Guide Review
Once 2004's Comin' From Where I'm From began to gather steam, it became common knowledge that Anthony Hamilton was no newcomer. New fans discovered that Hamilton had two other albums in his past. First, there was XTC, an album that was supposed to come out around 1995 but didn't see the light of day due the Uptown label's untimely death; MCA rescued it, released it, and were content with letting it slide into oblivion. Good luck finding a copy. Later on, Hamilton became affiliated with the family-like Soulife label, which disintegrated before he was able to release yet another album. Talk about rotten luck. The appropriately titled Soulife, released by Atlantic/Rhino in 2005, presents ten (and perhaps all) of the songs that were due for release on the album for Soulife, in addition two previously released songs, including "Love and War," from the Baby Boy soundtrack. According to the liners and credits, the material was originally laid down between 1999 and 2001, but several songs were re-recorded and tweaked, likely to make them sound a little more like 2005. As evidenced on Comin' From Where I'm From, Hamilton's voice is best suited for spare arrangements with dusty beats, sensitively played keyboards, and distant wah-wah guitars. Soulife is comparatively slick, which might throw some of Hamilton's newer fans, but there's still plenty of down-home grit to keep ears glued to the speakers, in addition to the main attraction -- the earthy, listen-to-it-all-day voice. While not as wonderful as Comin' From Where I'm From, "Georgie Parker" alone makes the album a must for anyone won over by "Charlene." The song will break your heart and sink into your subconscious with one play, even if you aren't paying any attention to the compelling lyrics. After the first listen -- one of those "Everyone I know must hear this right now" moments -- you'll feel like you've pulled up a golden truffle. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
Soulife Track Listing
Soulife Notes
On Soulife, soul sensation Anthony Hamilton's lost Atlantic debut, the Grammy-nominated singer fuses classic '70s soul with contemporary R&B and achieves some stellar results. This disc brings to light never-before-released material recorded between 1999 and 2001 and includes the track "Love And War," featuring Macy Gray and previously released on the Baby Boy soundtrack. Hamilton gained notoriety by singing back up for D'Angelo and through his performance on the Nappy Roots track "Po' Folks" before coming into his own as a major recording star.
Credits of Soulife
- Manny Marroquin
- Mixing
- Mike Shipley
- Mixing
- Walter Stewart
- Producer
- Mark Sparks
- Programming, Producer, Engineer
- Claudio Cueni
- Mixing
- Anthony Hamilton
- Producer
- Steve Woolard
- Project Assistant
- Kenny Nemes
- Product Manager
- Kelvin Wooten
- Organ, Bass, Guitar, Keyboards, Wurlitzer, Musician, Vibraphone, Drums
- Mike City
- Producer
- Sheryl Farber
- Editorial Supervision
- Douglas Coleman
- Mixing
- Mike Caren
- Mixing, A&R
- Jimane Nelson
- Organ, Fender Rhodes
- Karen LeBlanc
- Project Assistant
- Jacques Schwarz-Bart
- Horn
- Eric Krasno
- Guitar
- Bob Engel
- Engineer, Digital Editing
- Adam Deitch
- Drums
- Cory Frye
- Project Assistant
- Josh Rothstein
- Photography
- Ron Feemster
- Piano, Strings
- Jared Robbins
- Mixing Assistant
- Robin Hurley
- Project Assistant
- Masaki Koike
- Art Direction, Design
- B.C. 3 Ent.
- Producer
- Aaron Bay Schuck
- Artist Coordination
- Shawn Cruise
- Guitar
- Hua Hsu
- Liner Notes
- Doug Mayhem
- Producer, Engineer, Mixing
- Billi Redd
- Percussion, Vocals (Background)
- Dolo Pichino
- Performer
- Bernie Grundman
- Mastering
- Bruce Irvine
- Engineer, Mixing















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