In the mid-90s, the County Louth-based folk quartet The Corrs – comprised of siblings Andrea, Sharon, Caroline and Jim Corr – emerged from Ireland ready to cast their musical spell across the globe. With their first album, Forgiven, Not Forgotten, the group had already proven themselves as ones to watch, largely thanks to the single Runaway, which went Top 10 in their homeland, Top 50 in the UK and charted at No.68 in the US. However, it was their second album that would truly establish The Corrs’ rising status as folk-pop superstars. Stepping into the limelight with the finesse that only seasoned professionals can bring, The Corrs unveiled Talk On Corners, a sleekly-arranged labour of love that not only exceeded expectations but also elevated the band to unprecedented heights.
This is the story of how Talk On Corners combined the wistfulness of Irish folk music with the upbeat melodicism of pop music, forever etching The Corrs’ name into the annals of music history…
Listen to ‘Talk On Corners’ here.
The backstory: “We go from nothing to lose, everything to win, to get it wrong and it’s all over”
With Runaway having proven The Corrs could write hit singles, the siblings were under pressure to turn out more songs of a similar ilk when they started working on their second record. As Andrea Corr stated in her memoir, Barefoot Pilgrimage, “We go from nothing to lose, everything to win, to get it wrong and it’s all over.” Expectations over what would become Talk On Corners were rising, but writing what Andrea Corr called the “H word” wouldn’t be easy.
Luckily, the group had more than enough talent to step up to the challenge. But though all four siblings had sufficient songwriting chops, the very idea of writing hit singles to order took some adjusting to. For this reason, The Corrs were encouraged to collaborate with other industry heavyweights, such as US producer Glen Ballard, the man who had overseen Alanis Morrisette’s massively successful 1996 album, Jagged Little Pill.
The band subsequently flew out to California to take part in group songwriting sessions, and they soon found themselves rubbing shoulders with numerous songwriters of high renown. “Apparently a ‘hit’ (there, I said it) wasn’t something we could write alone,” Andrea reflected. “So the writing sessions in California began. Pairing each of us off with different, tried-and-tested ‘hitmakers’.” Reportedly, this didn’t sit easily with Jim Corr, who retreated to his bedroom with a guitar to prove to himself that he could do it alone. It’s all well and good having a helping hand to write a hit, he reasoned, but if The Corrs could do it themselves, the success would be theirs to own.