iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
Opening the iBooks Store.If iBooks doesn't open, click the iBooks app in your Dock.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from Piece By Piece by Katie Melua, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

Piece By Piece

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Georgia-born (as in the country, not the state) singer/songwriter Katie Melua found herself atop the British charts in 2003 with her breezy debut, Call Off the Search, which sold over three million copies in Europe alone. Her laid-back blend of blues, jazz, and pop with a kiss of worldbeat drew comparisons to Norah Jones, and rightfully so. She sticks to the formula on her lush, ultimately safe follow-up, Piece by Piece. This is Coldplay for the Diana Krall crowd, a perfectly rendered slice of adult contemporary pie for a lazy summer day delivered by an artist whose beautiful voice is almost striking in how unremarkable it is. Her longtime collaborator, producer/songwriter Mike Batt, provides the catchiest number, an odd and endearing little confection called "Nine Million Bicycles." It's both silly and sweet, two things that work in Melua's favor. Sure, she can vamp it up with the best of them on bluesy asides like "Shy Boy" and the dreadful "Blues in the Night," but there's a whole lot of innocence in that voice that just shrivels in the midst of all that bravado. Only in her early twenties, Melua's got plenty of time to decide on a persona, and Piece by Piece has enough quality material on it to placate fans until she does, but there's some tension here, and it doesn't sound intentional. Besides, anyone who covers Canned Heat and the Cure on the same record is still trying to figure it all out.

Customer Reviews

First Review

Katie Melua, a 22 year old from Georgia (former USSR), has a very mellow rhythm yet strong enough to hold your attention. Melua's style can be described as Nelly Furtado meets Norah Jones. The easy listening music is accompanied by smooth vocals as shown in "Piece By Piece" and "I Cried for You". On the other hand, some of the tracks in Melua's third album, can be border-line country with tracks like "Halfway Up the Hindu Kush" and "On the Road Again". As if that isn't enough, Melua offers tracks which display an ability to also sing jazz and blues like in "Shy Boy" and "Blue Shoes". Overall, Katie Melua displays her capability to sing an array of genres and delivers a promising album which has something to offer to everyone.

Dazzling & Enlightened

I bought this album after seeing the music video on television. I had no idea what to expect but I took a chance. Katie has a fresh, light voice that feels classic, (IE: Etta James). The album is full of jazzy riffs and melodic tones. The title track brought me to tears the first time I listened to it. She has an incredible knack for emitting her emotions through her voice. I listen to this in my car, in my house, and in my studio. Perfect for all situations.

WELCOME KATIE !!

Not since the debut of Frank Sinatra in the 1940's (and I was there) have I heard a singer as great as this young lady! I have one regret ---> I just discovered her and missed all those morsels of ear-pleasure that could have been mine if I had been more alert. Hands down, she's simply M A R V E L O U S !!

Biography

Born: September 16, 1984 in Kutaisi, Georgia, Russia

Genre: Pop

Years Active: '00s, '10s

Plucked from music school obscurity by songwriter/producer Mike Batt, Katie Melua quickly became the highest-selling female musician in the U.K., a feat that owed much of its success to her wildly popular 2003 debut. Melua was born in Soviet Georgia in 1984 and later moved to Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her family pulled up stakes several years later and relocated to London, where Melua entered the B.R.I.T. School for the Performing Arts & Technology. The record industry-funded school had a habit...
Full Bio