- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
The music is harmlessly listenable, and the requisite nods to her dance-floor legacy, like the sweeping, dramatic house anthem 'I'm a Fire' and the lockstep 'Stamp Your Feet,' are (at the very least) no less opportunistic than the latest albums by Madonna and Janet Jackson.
-
Q MagazineIf we forget her Lenny Henry-esque Jamaican accent on the title track's Ziggy Marley duet, she's on sterling form. [Aug 2008, p.143]
-
In-fashion vocal effects, which Summer certainly does not need, detract from a handful of these tracks, but as a whole, the album won't have trouble pleasing fans who just want to hear their queen have a blast and tear it up.
-
Autobiographical, hopeful, working through different genres, one can't help but feel that if she had stretched herself while remaining focused just on quality dance-pop that the record would have been fantastic and not such a sad sunset on the legendary Summer.
-
Most of the cuts on Crayons are adequate, but there is a distinct lack of the unmoored, thrilling sensuality that Summer used to trade in so effortlessly.
-
Unfortunately Summers’s voice and persona just don’t suit this material.
Awards & Rankings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 37 out of 53
-
Mixed: 4 out of 53
-
Negative: 12 out of 53
-
Dec 13, 2022
-
FrancoisC.Sep 6, 2008
-
AjR.Jul 12, 2008