Vonda Shepard's curious ascension into pop prominence on the heels of the Ally McBeal television series offers evidence that, if you just hang around Los Angeles long enough, you may finally get recognized. After years of laboring as a lower echelon L.A. rock singer/songwriter and backup singer (a second-rate 
Bonnie Raitt, one might say), 
Shepard hit paydirt of a sort playing a club singer on TV, and the quasi-soundtrack album 
Songs from Ally McBeal, which includes oldies covers from the '60s and '70s, was a million-selling Top Ten hit in 1998. The inevitable follow-up is more of the same, though this time around 
Shepard gets to pen five of the 14 tracks. On her own, 
Shepard is not untalented: "Read Your Mind," the lead-off track, is a tentative acceptance of love that might as easily be directed to 
Shepard's unexpected (and no doubt temporary) new audience as to a new boyfriend; "Confetti" is a '60s-style rocker that seems to be attacking the kind of kids who look to Ally McBeal for fashion and dating tips; and "Baby, Don't You Break My Heart Slow" is a good romantic ballad in the currently popular 
Diane Warren/adult contemporary style. Such material demonstrates that 
Shepard is worthy of a major-label release of her own songs, and not just in relation to Ally McBeal. ~ William Ruhlmann