Lovelines is the thirteenth studio album by the American music duo The Carpenters, released on October 31, 1989. It was the third Carpenters posthumous album released after the death of Karen Carpenter to feature entirely unreleased material.
"You're the One" is an outtake from 1977 album Passage.
"Honolulu City Lights", "Slow Dance" and "Where Do I Go from Here?" are from 1978 sessions.
"Kiss Me the Way You Did Last Night" and "The Uninvited Guest" are outtakes from Made in America, the studio album released in 1981 and the last completed during Karen's lifetime.
Two songs were taken from Carpenters television specials. "Little Girl Blue" is taken from 1978 Space Encounters TV special. "When I Fall in Love" was also originally recorded in 1978 for that TV special, but used later in in 1980.
The album also includes four Carpenters interpretations of songs from Karen Carpenter's solo recordings: the title track, "If I Had You", "If We Try" and "Remember When Lovin' Took All Night".
"You're the One" and "Where Do I Go from Here?" were previously used in the TV movie The Karen Carpenter Story.
In their review of the album, Billboard stated that "one listen and it's clear that no one - the closest is Gloria Estefan - has filled the void left after Karen's death in 1983. There's a good reason why some of the syrupy material was never released, but other tracks, like first single "If I Had You," the classic
"When I Fall In Love," and "Where Do I Go From Here," instantly recall why the duo was one of the most successful of the '70s."
Allmusic noted that "When I Fall in Love" brings a tear to the eye as it captures that indefinable and completely unique quality that Karen brought to each song she sang. While the material in this compilation is not sensational or ground-breaking, it is definitely a sentimental selection of tunes that go easy on the ear."
Critical reception
Track listing
Personnel
Charts
+ Chart performance for Lovelines
! scope="col" Chart (1990)
! scope="col" Peak
positionAustralian Albums (ARIA Charts) N.B. The High Point number in the NAT column represents the release's peak on the national chart. 110
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