The eponymous disc was the sixteenth studio recording of Fricke's career and her first with the Intersound label.
In 1989, Fricke's final album with Columbia Records was released titled Labor of Love.
[2] With limited commercial attention to her music, the label dropped her in 1990 and Fricke signed with the smaller Intersound Records in 1991.
The sessions for the album were produced by Gilles Godard and Randy Jackson (Fricke's husband at the time).
It also included a cover version of "Love Letters"[5] which was originally a top ten pop hit for Ketty Lester in 1962.