The Rainwater LP is Citizen Cope's fourth studio album, released 8 February 2010 on Amazon MP3, and digitally released elsewhere on 9 February 2010, and in-stores on 2 March 2010.[1]

The Rainwater LP
Studio album by
ReleasedFebruary 8, 2010
RecordedBrooklyn Recording/The Document Room (Malibu, CA), 2009
GenreAlternative rock, indie rock
Length39:07
LabelRainWater Recordings Inc.
ProducerClarence Greenwood
Citizen Cope chronology
Every Waking Moment
(2006)
The Rainwater LP
(2010)

The album is produced by Cope (Clarence Greenwood) and it is the first record released under his own record label - RainWater Recordings Inc. He explained the reason for releasing it himself: "I kept hearing things like 'Retail's gonna need you to do this,' or 'The artwork has to be like this.' I don't want to be led into those confines anymore. I want to be able to do it my own way."[2][3] The album's title is partially a reference to the commoditization of music, with musicians contractually obliged to provide a certain number of "LP"s; Cope stated "Now I'm not obligated to any record company, so I thought it was a nice play on that."[4] The album was recorded between Brooklyn Recording (Cobble Hill, Brooklyn) and The Document Room (Malibu, CA) during the course of 2009 and in between Cope's extensive touring.[1]

Cope worked on the album with musicians such as drummer Paul "Buggy" Edwards, legendary bass guitarists Michael "Funky Ned" Neal,[1] and Preston Crump,[1] keyboardist James Poyser (who previously has worked with acts such as The Roots, Jill Scott, and John Legend) and percussionist Bashiri Johnson.

The song "Keep Askin" was released as a free download on 14 June 2009 from the Citizen Cope website and announced as the first song from the forthcoming album.[5]

On 19 January 2010, the first official single from the album, "Healing Hands" was digitally released via digital service providers.[6]

Track listing edit

  1. "Keep Askin'" - 2:57
  2. "Healing Hands" - 5:28
  3. "I Couldn't Explain Why" - 3:43
  4. "Lifeline" - 3:45
  5. "Off the Ground" - 4:43
  6. "Jericho" - 4:19
  7. "The Newspaper" - 3:25
  8. "A Father's Son" - 4:13
  9. "Lifeline" (Barefeet version) - 3:47
  10. "Keep Askin'" (Acoustic version) - 2:49

Initial Pressing / Limited Edition B-Sides CD:

  1. "If There's Love" (Re-Recording)
  2. "Sideways" (Re-Recording)
  3. "Let the Drummer Kick" (Re-Recording)
  4. "The Gambler's Theme" (Shotguns LP)
  5. "Family" (Shotguns LP)

Critical reception edit

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic      [7]
MusicNow          

Alex Henderson of Allmusic gave the album a 3.5/5 rating, calling it "one of Greenwood's more consistent efforts".[7] In the view of Hays Harris of Richmond.com, "The mix of rock, folk, blues and hip-hop elements" on the album formed "a defining portrait of considerable depth".[8] Nancy Dunham of The Washington Examiner described it as an album that is "easy to fall in love with", calling it "Cope at his finest".[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Sclafani, Tony (2010) "Citizen Cope The Rainwater LP", Prefix, retrieved 2010-02-09
  2. ^ Hall, Tara (2010) "Citizen Cope adds to 'Rainwater' winter run Archived 2010-01-21 at the Wayback Machine", Live Daily, January 19, 2010, retrieved 2010-02-09 NOTE: DEAD LINK December 26, 2015
  3. ^ Same link referenced via Internet Archive/Wayback Machine december 26, 2015
  4. ^ Oksenhorn, Stewart (2010) "Citizen Cope takes the long view of making an album", Aspen Times, September 3, 2009, retrieved 2010-02-09
  5. ^ "New Citizen Cope free download", citizencope.com, retrieved 2010-02-09
  6. ^ ""Healing Hands" is available today!", citizencope.com, retrieved 2010-02-09
  7. ^ a b Henderson, Alex "The Rainwater LP Review", Allmusic, Macrovision Corporation, retrieved 2010-02-09
  8. ^ Harris, Hays (2010) "Citizen Cope Hits the National", Richmond.com, February 5, 2010, retrieved 2010-02-09
  9. ^ Dunham, Nancy (2010) "Citizen Cope shows no signs of slowing down", The Washington Examiner, February 4, 2010, retrieved 2010-02-09