In 1996, Tikaram left
WEA, her label of eight years, and spent some time pursuing other interests than music, including art and travel. For her next studio album, Tikaram decided to re-evaluate her musical direction and reinvent her image. She signed to a new label,
Mother Records, and found new management. On this album, Tikaram chose to work with Italian musician
Marco Sabiu, who produced the album and co-wrote seven of the tracks. The two had first worked together in 1996, when Sabiu and his producing partner Charlie Mallozzi (known collectively as
The Rapino Brothers) produced Tikaram's version of "
And I Think of You - E penso a te", which was included on
The Best of Tanita Tikaram. The pair's collaboration resulted in an album with a distinctively poppier, more electronic sound than Tikaram's earlier
folk-rock releases. Speaking of her collaboration with Sabiu, Tikaram revealed in 1998, Like on her previous album, 1995's
Lovers in the City, Tikaram collaborated with the
London Session Orchestra for the string sections on her new album. She also recorded
ABBA's "
The Day Before You Came", one of the few times she has covered another artist's song. In 1998, she described her version as "a bit spooky, a bit weird, almost electro". She added that "Amore Si" has a "very kitsch, melodramatic love story", and "Back in Your Arms" and "If I Ever" are "straight European pop songs, with a twist". In later years, Tikaram has described
The Cappuccino Songs as her "poppiest album" but one which she feels some ambivalence towards. She revealed in 2020, "The record company got very excited and brought in a star producer. To be honest, the whole thing became a bit of a nightmare for me and Marco, so much so that I sort of blanked the album out of my mind. My ambivalence about some of the songs stems from the feeling that some are 'well-written' as oppose[d] to [being] written from the heart. Perhaps a lack of identity is a risk you take in a collaboration." However, she added that on reflection she enjoys the album's "Europeanness", "variety" and Sabiu's "fabulous" arrangements. ==Release==