Trouble

by Reprise / Wea

$13.98
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Average Rating: * * * * *
Sales Rank:48762 (lower is better)
Price Used:$1.03
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Availability:Usually ships in 24 hours
Release Date:2004-09-28
Label:Reprise / Wea
UPC:093624843122
Binding:Audio CD
Published By:Reprise / Wea
ASIN:B0002XEDLW
Category:Music

Tracks on Trouble by Reprise / Wea

  1. Trouble
  2. When It All Comes Down
  3. Open Your Eyes
  4. Somebody
  5. A Voice That Carries
  6. Honey
  7. Green Grass
  8. January
  9. Marble Steps
  10. Sensitive Subject Matter
  11. I Hold Her
  12. Confessions Of A Teenage Girl

Editorial Reviews and Product Descriptions

Album Description

"I want everyone in the world to know who I am," says audacious Seattle-bred 19-year-old singer-songwriter Bonnie McKee. "I want to move people. I want to open people up - and I want to last." With her debut album Trouble, produced by Rob Cavallo (Green Day, Goo Goo Dolls, Alanis Morissette) and Bob Power - and its powerful anthem "Somebody" - McKee's bold pop-from-the-heart promises she will be not just a somebody but a major artist who indeed lasts.
Amazon.com

Although only nineteen years old, this precocious redhead unleashes more sass and ambiguity in her voice than a woman twice her age. Fierce and musically assured, Bonnie McKee is a pop alternative to Avril Lavigne, traversing some of the same lyrical territory as the Canadian punk thrush but with more emotional intelligence and grit--quite an accomplishment since McKee didn't employ the glossy talents of the Matrix, or anyone else for that matter--the singer penned all twelve tracks herself. With a vocal range on par with Christina Aguilera, McKee manages to go from kittenish to feral in the space of a single song, and always seems to end up on top, no matter how many times she stumbles. "When It All Comes Down" may be the sound of heartbreak, but McKee refuses to wallow in her pain and plots her own eventual recovery in the space of a single song. By rights, this should be the anthem for anyone attempting to get over a breakup--without appearing to. "Confessions of a Teenage Girl," is so winsome and engaging, it could inspire a Fox TV show. But Bonnie McKee has talent to burn, so it wouldn't be a surprise if that's already in the works. Paired with Green Day producer, Rob Cavallo, McKee elevates post-teen rebellion and broken romance to high art--and this is only the beginning of what she's capable of. --Jaan Uhelszki

Customer Reviews

Lovely album - Reviewed on 2008-09-16
* * * * *

it's one a few rare album that I enough from the start to the end
suprisingly great for a singer I have never heard of - Reviewed on 2008-03-26
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I bought this after listening to the music samples on Amazon.
The cd is really good. If you like fun upbeat girl music check it out.
I especially like the last track.
Very Good - Reviewed on 2008-03-24
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Bonnie McKee puts in to words, so simply, what girls feel all the time. Theres vulnerability with songs like 'Sensitive Subject Matter' and 'Honey', then there's the bad girl songs like 'January' and 'Trouble' theres the whole 'get-what-I-want' bit with 'Voice That Carries', 'Confessions of A Teenage Girl' and 'When It All Comes Down'. The album is really great, and with more publicity, I'm sure it would have been the next big thing.
Incredible: Deserves much more attention - Reviewed on 2008-01-07
* * * * *
1 customer found this review helpful.

Whenever I play this album, people say, "Who is this? This is awesome." It deserves far more attention than it has gotten. You will not be disappointed. The whole album is great. Honey, When It All Comes Down, and Trouble are off the charts.

The style is rock-y, blues-y, but with modern rhythms. Well produced but not overly so.

A Blah attempt at pop music - Reviewed on 2007-05-03
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2 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

So I think Bonnie McKee has a phenomenal voice, but I swear listening to her cd is tolerable for about 30 seconds / 1 minute and then I want to skip ahead the song, and then I'm doing it for almost every song on there..

I dunno.. that one song "Somewhere" is good. Which is I guess why it was put on the "win a date with tad hamilton" soundtrack. But I could easily listen to that one song and none of the others and not miss out on anything. So I can't really say it's worth it to buy this cd. I mean, it's not that she doesn't have talent when it comes to her voice. It's just that she doesn't have any talent when it comes to song writing or being interesting. Which somewhat defeats the purpose of making a cd I think. I dunno. When grammy winning people start writing songs for her to sing, and then mixing the tracks for her, maybe then I'd pick her up again. Until then pass on this cd.
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