CD Shopper
Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home > Music > Turn Around  
Categories
Music
DVD Movies
Video Games
Audio & Video
Books
Computers
Subcategories
General
Compilations
Live Recordings
Christian Alternative
Christian Contemporary Music
Christian Rap
Christian Rock
Country Gospel
Gospel
Praise & Worship

Turn Around

Turn Around

zoom enlarge 
Artist: Jonny Lang
Label: A&M
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy New: $12.99
You Save: $0.99 (7%)



New (54) Used (26) from $5.55

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 137 reviews
Sales Rank: 5924

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 000729202
UPC: 602517033979
EAN: 0602517033979
ASIN: B000H7JDVS

Release Date: September 19, 2006
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Tracks:

  • Intro
  • Bump In The Road
  • One Person At A Time
  • The Other Side Of The Fence
  • Turn Around
  • My Love Remains
  • Thankful
  • Only A Man
  • Don't Stop (For Anything)
  • Anything's Possible
  • Last Goodbye
  • On My Feet Again
  • That Great Day
  • It's Not Over
  • Outro

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
The churchy organ that opens and closes Jonny Lang's fifth album reveals its direction. After 2003's Long Time Coming plunged the once-up-and-coming blues guitarist into more soulful and commercial waters, Turn Around completes the transition. Lang is lyrically direct in his spiritual awakening, and the uplifting if sometimes pedantic lyrics make it clear that any vestiges of the teenaged guitar slinger that knocked out an impressive version of the lascivious "Good Morning Little Schoolgirl" on his debut are far in the past. A few short leads aside, Lang shifts into full Stevie Wonder/Prince mode, but unfortunately without the quality material that made those artists' work transcend genre. With vocals that shift from guttural howls to sweet and screaming falsetto on tunes like "Don't Stop (For Anything)" and a penchant for oversinging, he's not aiming for subtlety. But there are some winning melodies here: songs such as "Anything's Possible" and "One Person at a Time" boast catchy choruses in a funkified, gospel-tinged, adult-alternative vein bound to appeal to audiences that lean towards obvious religious references in their music. This is a well crafted, undeniably heartfelt set from Lang, who makes it abundantly clear he feels his destiny is to make the world a better place through Jesus. It's a valid enough objective that doesn't quite connect with Lang's rather heavy-handed lyrics, affected singing, and derivative tunes. --Hal Horowitz

Album Description
The Grammy-nominated, former prodigy instrumentalist, who topped the Billboard New Artist chart with his first album at age 15, stands now as a mature creative force, made more sensitive yet also toughened by life's adventures. He's learned what it means to rise above hard times and to find meaning where chaos seemed to rule.

These insights, and the emotions they unleash, makes Turn Around the pivotal album of Jonny Lang's career to date - a passage that links the triumphs of his past to the promise of his future.

A soul-stirring organ, played by Grammy-winning producer Shannon Sanders, forecasts the surge of music that follows on Turn Around: the stomping funk of "Bump in the Road," the startling climax that closes "The Other Side of the Fence," the electrifying vocal exchanges with Michael McDonald on "Thankful," and on the opposite extreme, the work-gang chant that drives "Turn Around" and the profound intimacy of "Only a Man" ...

Turn Around is all of this and more, a tumble of musical colors that dazzle and soothe. And in the end, they achieve coherence through the meaning that Lang conveys so urgently.

"With this album I want to focus, more than ever before, on my purpose in life," he explains. "I've been so incredibly blessed. My wife and I just had our fifth anniversary. I get to do what I love for a living. But it wasn't so long ago that I was spiraling downward in a lot of ways, until God touched my life and set me on the right track. I feel a huge debt to give glory back to Him for everything He has done for me. It's the least he can do."

That said, Turn Around is not slotted only to listeners who have - or have not - undergone this kind of transformation. It inspires, excites, and gets people on their feet - but it doesn't preach. "I understand that not everybody believes as I do," Lang says, "which is fine. I just want to sing about what's going on in my life and let people make up their own minds about that."

For all the conviction that Lang brings to Turn Around, the album began almost as an afterthought. Lang was in the studio one day with his producer, Ron Fair, who is also president of A&M/Interscope Records. There wasn't anything pressing on the agenda; they were doing routine work on the final stages of Lang's previous record, Long Time Coming. Then, out of the blue, Fair said something completely unexpected.

"He looks at me and goes, `Dude, you need to make a gospel record,'" Lang says, laughing at the recollection. "Now, I hadn't really mentioned much to Ron about that side of my life, but for some reason he knew where I was at. So I thought about it for just a second and said, `Yes, I do.'"

There is plenty of gospel in Turn Around, especially in the choir that riffs through "Thankful" and "It's Not Over." But rustic country ("On That Great Day," with guests Buddy Miller and Sam Bush), Motown funk ("One Person at a Time"), jazzy folk ("My Love Remains"), and other influences flavor this music too. In this varied setting, "gospel" has more to do with the spirit that animates these tracks than any category it might inhabit.


Customer Reviews:   Read 132 more reviews...

4 out of 5 stars turn around   July 12, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

jonny lang always just floors me... i like this cd.... its nice to know hes not just blue............. always powerful and i still will drive a longggggggggggggggggg way to watch him live.... its different but ever changing as any good artist will do........ love you jonny lang.....


4 out of 5 stars Top notch spiritual album   July 7, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

Lots of complaints on here from prior Jonny Lang fans. I only learned of Lang recently, so I am only familiar with his new work. It is outstanding. I bet most complaints are not really about the music or artist himself, but rather that they were expecting something more similar to his past work. For what it is though, it is unique, inspiring , and has a great beat.


1 out of 5 stars Soulful music without a soul...   June 29, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

I am (was) a great fan of Jonny Lang. I have seen him a few times in concert and loved that a young kid could play the guitar like he did.

Sure this album changes from darker themes to a more christian theme but that is not my beef with the album. The problem is that he apparently has gradually given up on playing the guitar in his songs. He was an excellent soloist and if he wants to find religion, fine, just keep playing the instrument that got you there. He is dangerously close to becoming a christian-backstreet boy.

Jonny, you dont have to do drugs or sing about sin to make great music. This is not, musically speaking, great music.

Maybe next album...



5 out of 5 stars Outrageously soulful and mature....   May 17, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

You can tell he has now experienced life, and is not just soulfully singing about it....although he did THAT well, too!


5 out of 5 stars Get This One!   March 28, 2008
 1 out of 2 found this review helpful

Love it!
I understand why this Jonny Lang album is award winning.
Excellent, Jonny! Keep it up!


Copyright 2006 - CD Shopper
Bestsellers
Rambling Boy
Hello Love
WOW Hits 2009
The Christmas Collection
Peace on Earth
O Brother, Where Art Thou?
Revelation
The Altar and the Door
Unexpected
Wow Hits 2008
New Releases
Rambling Boy
Hello Love
WOW Hits 2009
The Christmas Collection
Peace on Earth
Revelation
Unexpected
The Sound
YIZKOR: Music of Memory
What If We