High Hopes and Heartbreaks Brooke White

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CD - Digi-Pak

  • Release Date: 07/21/2009
  • Sales Rank: 10,696
  • Label: JUNE BABY RECORDS
  • UPC: 805859016222

Listener Rating: (6 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Soothing" See All

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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High Hopes and Heartbreaks

1LISTENRadio Radio 3:35
2LISTENHold Up My Heart 3:49
3LISTENOut of the Ashes 3:11
4LISTENPhoenix 4:46
5LISTENWhen We Were One 3:59
6LISTENUse Somebody 4:12
7LISTENSmile Demo Version 4:03
8LISTENLittle Bird 3:44
9LISTENHigh Hopes & Heartbreak 4:21
10LISTENSometimes Love 3:12
11LISTENCalifornia Song 4:15
12LISTENBe Careful 2:32

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

A large part of Brooke White's considerable charm on American Idol was how she was cheerfully, completely out of time -- a '70s relic hauled out of the back of an attic, dusted off, and cleaned up without regard for modernity. An element of this time warp remains on High Hopes and Heartbreaks, her second album and first of any profile, but she's shifted her timeline somewhat, adding some sass and sweetness learned from late-'70s Olivia Newton-John, inadvertently proving there's a big difference between Grease and Tapestry. It's a difference that gives High Hopes a vague feeling of putting on a show, a perhaps inevitable side-effect from being on a talent contest, one where she was judged on how she made a song her own, as she does here by imagining what would happen if Kings of Leon's "Use Somebody" was performed by an America fronted by Carole King. America provides a frequent touchstone here -- their Harrison-esque slide guitars popping up all over the place, their "Ventura Highway" name-dropped just before Joni's Ladies of the Canyon -- and that's when White is at her best, creating a dreamy soft rock for a hazy, sunny afternoon. Of course, this is the sound White has always done best, both on American Idol and on her debut Songs from the Attic, and when she tries to break out of this sound she gets into some trouble, wearing the disco threads of the title track quite uncomfortably and getting caught in the molasses sludge of stately ballads. Fortunately, these moments don't happen all that often -- enough to notice but not enough to hamper the enjoyment of a sweet, likeable album that largely follows through on White's Idol promise. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

High Hopes and Heartbreaksby spitzlady

Reader Rating:
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October 16, 2009: I love this album. I know Brooke wrote all but one song, she's such a talented person. I find myself singing Radio Radio all the time.

Easy Listeningby Anonymous

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October 10, 2009: Brooke White is an American Idol. Great album.


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