8,254,852 plays
2,341 SHARES
10,688 FAVS

album

A Different Me,Keyshia Cole
1,920,591
plays
1,346
favs
708
shares
track
duration
plays
01
A Different Me "Intro"
1:48
63,776
02
Make Me Over
3:05
134,237
03
Please Don't Stop
4:04
119,743
04
Erotic
4:11
112,340
05
You Complete Me
3:51
304,703
06
No Other
3:34
107,973
07
Oh-Oh, Yeah -Yea
3:58
108,409
08
Playa Cardz Right
4:53
147,242
09
Brand New
4:16
153,700
10
Trust
4:13
219,930
11
Thought You Should Know
4:18
103,617
12
This Is Us
3:16
113,130
13
Where This Love Could End Up
2:55
86,717
14
Beautiful Music
3:59
83,857
15
A Different Me "Outro"
1:31
61,051

album review

A Different Me offers more dimensions, from lyrical and production standpoints, than Keyshia Cole's first two albums. Everything she recorded prior to this came from some degree of pain. Even though Just Like You's "Heaven Sent" was as beatific as anything else on the charts throughout 2008, its sentiment came more from a sense of relief in the wake of relationships gone sour, and "Let It Go" was made for the club but dealt with "roaming dogs." Overall, this is Cole's most free-spirited and adventurous album to date, and it is not without its stretches where reach exceeds grasp, like the jazzed-up, over-busy statement of purpose "Make Me Over" and the surprisingly saccharine "This Is Us." Yet there's a core of at least seven songs here that rate as highly as the best from the first two albums, and they're anything but reheated. "Don't Stop" beams with energy and pure, uncomplicated joy. "Oh-Oh, Yeah-Yea" is yearningly seductive, from Cole's pleas to its drawn-out tides of strings. In "Thought You Should Know," she doesn't drop her guard entirely while revealing more vulnerability than ever. "No Other" is the only track that sounds cut from the same cloth as Just Like You, and the resemblance is only in sound, with the equally urgent and sweepingly dramatic "Shoulda Let You Go" a definite reference, but the emotions between the two are starkly contrasting, with regret exchanged for aching desire. Cole pushes herself into new territory and becomes a more versatile songwriter and vocalist in convincing, frequently thrilling, fashion. Here's where the comparisons begin to fade away. ~ Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
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