Planted firmly in a field of earnest singer/songwriters, Eliot Morris tilts towards Jackson Browne-like sincerity on his debut release. Having legendary Browne cohorts Leland Sklar (bass), Craig Doerge (keyboards), and David Lindley (lap steel) along as backup musicians also brings substantial credibility to the proceedings, and What's Mine Is Yours is certainly a professionally executed album. With production by Tony Berg and mixing by Bob Clearmountain, in addition to musical input from all three members of Nickel Creek, this is clearly an important and expensive project for Universal. For the most part, Morris is up for the challenge. Along with the Browne connection, Morris takes cues from tour mates Counting Crows, especially since his voice is a ringer for Adam Duritz's and the songs unwind with Crows-like mid-tempo drama. Lyrically he's stuck in a reflective, overtly serious mood, both romantically ("Will She Ever Fall in Love Again?," "Love Rescue Me") and world-wise ("This Colorful World," "Balancing the World") but like Duritz, he lays it on thick and these songs could use some judicious editing. They sound fine, but there is a nagging sterility in the approach that seems to emerge from a constricting A&R overkill. There is virtually no interplay between Morris and the band, and it seems like he is singing to backing tracks created when he wasn't around. The songs try hard -- sometimes too hard -- to make statements, intermittently connecting but more often sounding a bit overblown if not quite pretentious. For all the talented firepower involved, Morris' wordy tunes don't allow the musicians to let loose. Call it the major-label syndrome of eliminating the unpredictability that makes music edgy, instead creating preconceived, immaculately crafted songs that don't naturally resonate. That's not a deal breaker, since Morris obviously has talent, but it leaves this album with a dry, stiff sound that doesn't connect often enough emotionally and all but wastes incredible musicianship that screams for more room to breathe. ~ Hal Horowitz, All Music Guide
What's Mine Is Yours
08/15/2006 | Umvd Labels
All Music Guide Review
What's Mine Is Yours Track Listing
What's Mine Is Yours Notes
1 The Infancy Of Us
2 Balancing The World
3 Faultline
4 The Moment You Believe
5 No One Has To Know
6 This Colorful World
7 I Will Try
8 Anyway
9 Will She Ever Love Again?
10 Novocain
Credits of What's Mine Is Yours
- Val McCallum
- Guitar (Electric)
- Jeff Trott
- Guitar
- Patrick Warren
- Harmonium, Keyboards, String Arrangements
- Steve Moir
- Management
- Leland Sklar
- Bass
- Chris Thile
- Mandolin
- Eloise Bryan
- A&R
- James Minchin
- Photography
- Inara George
- Vocals (Background)
- Barbara Rose
- Management
- Conrad Rafield
- Executive Producer
- Eric Gorfain
- Violin
- Daphne Chen
- Violin
- Sean Watkins
- Vocals (Background)
- Ilya Toshinsky
- Banjo, Guitar
- Michele Simon
- A&R
- Gary Borman
- Management
- Joe Spix
- Art Direction, Design
- Leah Katz
- Viola
- Gillian Russell
- A&R
- Eliot Morris
- Guitar (Acoustic), Photo Courtesy, Cover Art Concept, Vocals
- Taylor Goldsmith
- Vocals (Background)
- Blake Mills
- Guitar (Rhythm)
- Thomas Berg
- Engineer
- Lisa Germano
- Violin
- Tony Berg
- Piano, Tamboura, Engineer, Producer
- Bekka Bramlett
- Percussion, Vocals (Background)
- Joe Chiccarelli
- Engineer
- Luis Conte
- Percussion
- Richard Dodd
- Cello
- Gary Gersh
- Executive Producer
- James Harrah
- Guitar
- David Immerglück
- Pedal Steel
- Victor Indrizzo
- Percussion, Drums
- Bob Ludwig
- Mastering
- David Lindley
- Lap Steel Guitar












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