It Won't Be Soon Before Long
05/22/2007 | A&m / Octone
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CD
$15.99IT WON'T BE SOON BEFORE LONG
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CD
$22.99IT WON'T BE SOON BEFORE LONG (LTD)
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Review
"It'll be Zappa meets Chili Peppers" the band said of their sophomore
effort, but five years after their platinum-selling Songs About
Jane, Maroon 5 have produced an album more lounge band than lead act.
If Jane herself was the driving muse for their debut, then the band
have yet to find a replacement: The biting vitriol and edgy hooks that
made their previous record so irresistible have been smoothed into a
wash of mid-tempo funk tunes, rich with production effects but falling
short of the band's early promise.
The first single, "Makes Me Wonder," is fair warning for the sleeker, dense
sound: it's catchy and melodic, but hardly high-impact. Elsewhere, the
early jarring potential of "Little of Your Time" lapses into sex-god
platitudes and a thin chorus, while "Can't Stop" takes a sharp melody
and then buries it with frantic repetition.
Their debut proved the
band capable of dark lyrical undertones, but now even the murderous impulses of "Wake Up
Call" seem dull and perfunctory. In
addition to the weak song-writing, Adam Levine's falsetto must take
some of the blame—its past
sweetness is little seen here, leaving the ode to "my little girl" in the ballad "Goodnight Goodnight" sounding trite rather than true.
—Abby McDonald
05.22.07
All Music Guide Review
Maroon 5's 2002 debut album, Songs About Jane, was the kind of hit that doesn't happen often in the new millennium -- a genuine word-of-mouth hit whose popularity grew steadily after its release, largely due to the sweet, sunny hit "This Love," a song sly and catchy enough to stay on the adult pop charts for years without wearing out its welcome. It also was catchy enough to engender years of goodwill. Five years of goodwill, in fact, as the band toured heavily while slowly tinkering away on their second album, finally delivering It Won't Be Soon Before Long (its title perhaps a pun on the gap between records, perhaps not) half a decade after Songs About Jane. If that delay sounds like a symptom of sophomore jitters, that's not exactly true, since during that long stretch between albums Maroon 5 worked Songs About Jane and, in a sense, that album wasn't strictly their first album, either. Maroon 5 evolved out of Kara's Flowers, a post-grunge pop band whose 1997 debut never took off, not even when their debut was reissued in the wake of Maroon's success, but it did provide the group with the foundation for their success; it's where they paid their dues and learned how to be a pop band. Traces of Kara's Flowers could be heard in Maroon's rockier moments on their debut, but under their new name, the group began to develop an infatuation with blue-eyed soul-pop, which they wisely develop on It Won't Be Soon Before Long. More than develop, they modernize it, borrowing elements of Justin Timberlake's stylized synthesized soul, but Adam Levine is wise enough to know that he's no young colt, like JT. He knows that he's a pop guy, somewhat in the tradition of Hall & Oates, but he isn't trying to be retro, he's trying to fill that void, making records that are melodic, stylish, and soulful, which It Won't Be Soon Before Long certainly is.
In every respect, It Won't Be Soon is a bigger album than its predecessor: hooks pile up one after another, there's not an ounce of fat on the songs, the production is so immaculate that it glistens. If there were lingering elements of Maroon 5's alt-rock past on Songs About Jane -- primarily in its lazy, hazy vibe -- they're gone now, replaced by the sleek, assured sound of a band that's eager to embrace its status as the big American mainstream pop band of the decade. But Maroon 5 isn't desperately grasping at the brass ring, they're playing it smart, building upon the core strengths of their debut and crafting a record that's designed to appeal to many different listeners, from teens crushing on Nelly Furtado's R&B makeover to adults looking for something smooth and melodic. It Won't Be Soon Before Long appeals to both audiences with an ease that seems effortless, but like any modern blockbuster, this album was shepherded by several different teams of producers, all brought in to emphasize a different personality within the group. The bulk of the record was cut with Spike Stent and Mike Elizondo -- Stent worked with U2, Oasis, Björk, and Gwen Stefani, while Elizondo had produced Fiona Apple and Pink -- but Queens of the Stone Age producer Eric Valentine was brought in for a couple of cuts, as was Mark Endert, who mixed "This Love." There may have been three different sets of producers, but the album is streamlined and seamless, never seeming calculated even if it was clearly made with an eye on mass appeal, and there are two reasons for that. First, Maroon 5 has gelled as a band, developing a clean, crisp attack that may bear traces of its influences -- there are knowing references to Prince, the Police, even OutKast sprinkled throughout (the keyboard on "Little of Your Time" is a direct nod to "Hey Ya") -- but it's a sound that's instantly identifiable as the band's own signature. Nowhere is that more evident than in how they can give soulful grooves like "If I Never See Your Face Again" a rock edge -- or how they can suddenly explode into shards of noise as they do on the coda of "Kiwi" -- or how when the electronic instruments dominate the production, the music still breathes like the work of an actual band, not like something that was constructed on a computer. But like with any good blue-eyed soul, the reason that this album works is the songs themselves. Even the flashiest production-driven tracks here -- the opening one-two punch of "If I Never See Your Face Again" and "Makes Me Wonder" -- aren't about feel; they're about the songs, which are uniformly tight and tuneful, sounding better with repeated plays, the way any radio-oriented pop should. If some of the ballads aren't as distinguished as the livelier tracks, they nevertheless are as sharply crafted as the rest, and the end result is that It Won't Be Soon Before Long is that rare self-stylized blockbuster album that sounds as big and satisfying as was intended. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide
Track Listing
Credits
- Mark "Spike" Stent
- Producer, Engineer, Mixing
- Eric Swanson
- Digital Editing
- Eric Valentine
- Producer, Engineer, Mixing
- Mark Endert
- Arranger, Drum Programming, Engineer, Keyboards, Mixing, Producer
- Adam Levine
- Guitar, Vocals, Drums
- Jolie Jones Levine
- Production Coordination
- Len Peltier
- Art Direction, Design
- Mike Elizondo
- Bass, Keyboards, Guitar, Producer, Piano
- Ross Garfield
- Drum Technician, Percussion Technician
- Eric Gorfain
- String Arrangements
- Sam Farrar
- Arranger, Keyboards, Drum Programming, Producer
- Jay Goin
- Assistant Engineer
- Maroon 5
- Producer
- Mickey Madden
- Bass
- Ryan Dusick
- Musical Direction
- Adam MacDougall
- Keyboards
- Ben Berkman
- A&R
- Doug Tyo
- Assistant Engineer
- Chris Roach
- Assistant Engineer
- Alex Dromgoole
- Mixing Assistant
- Jordan Feldstein
- Management
- Matt Flynn
- Drums
- Graham Hope
- Assistant Engineer
- Tony Adams
- Percussion Technician
- Lenny Castro
- Percussion
- Gary Grant
- Horn
- Jerry Hey
- Horn
- Dan Higgins
- Horn
- Ted Jensen
- Mastering
- Doug Johnson
- Digital Editing
Notes
Nominee - 51st GRAMMY® Awards
Best Pop Performance By A Duo Or Group With Vocals
(For established duos or groups, with vocals. Singles or Tracks only.)
"Won't Go Home Without You"
Maroon 5
Track from: It Won't Be Soon Before Long
















