Rainbow (Mariah Carey)

| Mariah Carey

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  • Reviews Counted:10

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Rainbow (Mariah Carey)

Rainbow is the seventh studio album by American singer and songwriter Mariah Carey. It was released on November 2, 1999, by Columbia Records. The album followed the same pattern as Carey's previous album, Butterfly (1997), in which she began her transition into the urban market. Rainbow contains a mix of hip hop-influenced R&B jams, as well as a variety of slow ballads. On the album, Carey worked with David Foster and Diane Warren, who, as well as Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, replaced Walter Afanasieff, the main balladeer Carey worked with throughout the 90s. As a result of her separation from her husband, Tommy Mottola, Carey had more control over the musical style of this album, so she collaborated with several artists such as Jay-Z, Usher, and Snoop Dogg, as well as Missy Elliott, Joe, Da Brat, Master P, Eve, Lil' Kim, 98 , Phil Collins and Mystikal. --Wikipedia

Critic Reviews

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  • Rolling Stone

    Rainbow is at its best — and Carey at her most comfortable — when urbane hip-hop stylings and faux R&B coexist in smooth middle-of-the-road harmony.  

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  • The Harvard Crimson

    There's no pot of gold at the end of Rainbow. The album strips that sound down to its purest form, cleverly obfuscating her predictably smarmy lyrics with sonorous mumblings.  

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  • All Music

    Rainbow proves that she can still pull off that difficult balancing act, but it's hard not to be a little disappointed that she'd didn't shake the music up a little bit more -- after all, it would have been a more effective album if the heartbreak, sorrow, and joy that bubbles underneath the music were brought to the surface.  

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  • Mariah Carey Archives

    Don't get me wrong, this album has hits... Where the problem lies is in the fact that she will collaborate with super talented people and then become an afterthought.  

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  • Entertainment Weekly

    What began on Butterfly as a departure ends up on Rainbow a progression — perhaps the first compelling proof of her true colors as an artist.  

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  • Verbal Diarrhoea

    While some of the tracks clearly don’t hit the mark in my mind, there are some moments that compete well with the highlights of earlier albums, even if they don’t quite match the peaks. 

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  • Wilson & Alroy's Record Reviews

    You've got to give Carey credit: she really tries to provide something for everybody.  

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  • The Baltimore Sun

    Top pop diva's new release meshes her trademark tunefulness with more meaningful lyrics.  

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  • Los Angeles Times

    Exhibiting an emotional authority to match her technical prowess, she gives us a vision of love that's dynamic without being ostentatious.  

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  • USA Today

    A prism of pure Carey and a bit of the bubbly.  

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