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Fantasia

 
Album Review: Fantasia

  • Artist: Fantasia
  • Rating: StarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: December 12, 2006
  • Genre: Rhythm & Blues

Review

Fantasia Barrino's first album, Free Yourself, wasn't exactly a flop but it wasn't a hit, either. It debuted in the Top Ten and had four singles in the Billboard R&B charts, which is far from a disaster but it was a disappointment by American Idol standards, particularly for a vocalist who was considered by many viewers, as well as judge Simon Cowell, the most talented singer to yet appear on the show. Talented Fantasia certainly was, but talent can be hard to sell, and Fantasia's problem boiled down to this: she had enough raw vocal power to draw comparisons to such classic soul divas as Aretha Franklin, which is what appealed to the legions of middle-America fans of the show, but that's not a style that has much to do with contemporary R&B, so she was given a modern makeover on Free Yourself. It was a cautious one, though, leaving remnants of her Idol persona -- most evident on a reprise of her show-stopping interpretation of Gershwin's "Summertime" -- surrounded by hip-hop-inflected urban soul like the single "Baby Mama," which was precisely the kind of thing that made fans of "Summertime" recoil. And recoil they did. They wound up avoiding the album, and "Baby Mama" didn't win enough converts to make up for the Idol audience's absence, so Fantasia and company took the only logical step for her eponymous sophomore album: they made it strictly R&B.

Since it adheres to just one style of music, Fantasia is a more consistent album than her debut; it has a sense of purpose and it takes greater risks in the production, two things which make it a bolder, better album than Free Yourself. Fantasia is a hard R&B album through and through, a distinction made clear by the album-opening "Hood Boy," a dynamite single built on a blaring Supremes sample and featuring a rap from Big Boi that sets the tone for the rest of the record. Like Destiny's Child in Soldier, Fantasia is celebrating thugs, and with the day-glo Supremes sample skipping and stuttering in circles, "Hood Boy" sounds not unlike an updated version of Ike & Tina, as Fantasia desperately pledges her devotion to strong men. It's inspired in concept and delivery, as Barrino puts her all into it and it works: with this one track, she sheds her AmIdol past and remakes herself into a vibrant, vital diva. Even when things slow down for the ballads Fantasia never sounds schlocky; the songs sound made for DJs and clubs, which is why the album is at its best when it sticks close to that updated '70s soul feel, as on "Baby Makin' Hips" which doesn't hit as hard as "Hood Boy" but it's equally alluring in its cool reserve. So, the sound is right on Fantasia, as is Barrino's performance: she delivers on the promise she displayed on the show, sounding like a full-throttle powerhouse on the faster songs and smoldering on the slower ones. That leaves the only problem of the record: the songs aren't all that great. There are exceptions -- the previously mentioned "Hood Boy" and "Baby Makin' Hips," of course, but also a handful of others, such as the slow-burning "Two Weeks Notice," co-written by Missy Elliott -- but this is a record that rides on its sound, whether it's coming from Fantasia or from the producers, who always present her at her best. This is enough to make Fantasia better as an album and statement of purpose than Free Yourself, but no matter how good tracks like "Uneligible" sound -- and with its fuzz-toned instrumental breaks and skeletal beats, the track does sound pretty great -- it's hard not to wish that there were hooks as memorable as the production. That said, Fantasia does its job: it may not be perfect, but it fully breaks Barrino free of her American Idol persona, giving her a sound and style that she can build a career upon. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Hood Boy (Lyrics) Frank DeVol, Lamont Dozier, Brian Holland, Antwan Patton, Johnta Austin Big Boi, Fantasia (3:34)
When I See You Louis Biancaniello, Janet Sewell Fantasia (3:37)
I Nominate U (Lyrics) Andre Harris, Balewa Muhammad, Vidal Davis, Candice Nelson Fantasia (4:34)
Baby Makin' Hips (Lyrics) Andre Harris, Balewa Muhammad, Vidal Davis, Candice Nelson Fantasia (3:21)
Not the Way I Do Sean Garrett Fantasia (3:35)
Only One U (Lyrics) Balewa Muhammad, Candice Nelson Fantasia (4:00)
I Feel Beautiful (Lyrics) Diane Warren Fantasia (3:33)
I'm Not That Type (Lyrics) Missy Elliott Fantasia (4:07)
Uneligible (Lyrics) Balewa Muhammad, Candice Nelson Fantasia (3:00)
Two Weeks Notice (Lyrics) Craig Brockman, Missy Elliott, Corte Ellis Fantasia (4:42)
Surround U (Lyrics) Denzil Miller, Kurt Walker, Kasseem Dean, Lawrence Smith, Makeba Riddick Fantasia (3:19)
Bore Me (Yawn) Balewa Muhammad, Candice Nelson Fantasia (2:55)
Sunshine (Lyrics) Harold Lilly Fantasia (3:47)
Bump What Ya Friends Say (Lyrics) Missy Elliott, Philip Lees Fantasia (4:44)

Credits

Louis Biancaniello (Keyboards), Louis Biancaniello (Programming), Jimmy Douglass (Mixing), Jon Gass (Mixing), Chris Gehringer (Mastering), Larry Jackson (A&R), Rich Keller (Mixing), Manny Marroquin (Mixing), Missy Elliott (Vocals), Missy Elliott (Producer), Missy Elliott (Engineer), Paul Boutin (Engineer), Paul J. Falcone (Engineer), Paul J. Falcone (Mixing), Vernon Mungo (Engineer), Dave Russell (Mixing), Andre Harris (Producer), Andre Harris (Musician), Jamar Jones (String Arrangements), Swizz Beatz (Producer), Mona Scott (Management), Vidal Davis (Producer), Vidal Davis (Musician), Peter Rogers (Keyboards), Ruben Rivera (Engineer), Bryan-Michael Cox (Producer), Harold Lilly (Producer), Candice Childress (Production Coordination), Chris Spilfogel (Engineer), Brian Warwick (Vocal Engineer), Vincent Dilorenzo (Mixing), Philip Lees (Producer), Geoffrey Rice (Assistant), Bruce Waynne (Vocal Producer), Brian Sumner (Engineer), Javier Valverde (Assistant), Sam Thomas (Engineer), Aaron Fessel (Engineer), Aaron Fessel (Vocal Engineer), Corte Ellis (Vocals (Background)), Corte Ellis (Engineer), Corte Ellis (Vocal Producer), Alonzo Vargas (Engineer), Phil Margaziotis (Engineer), Jane Morledge (Design), Jane Morledge (Creative Director), Sean Garrett (Producer), Candice Nelson (Vocal Scratches), Andros Rodriguez (Engineer), Marcella "Ms. Lago" Araica (Engineer), Marcella "Ms. Lago" Araica (Mixing), Brian Cockerham (Bass), Taurian "TJ" Osborne (Strings), Taurian "TJ" Osborne (Musician)
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Wikipedia: Fantasia (album)
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Fantasia
Studio album by Fantasia
Released December 12, 2006
Recorded 2006
Genre R&B, soul, funk
Label J
Producer Babyface, Bryan Michael Cox, Danja, Dre & Vidal, Missy Elliott, Kwamé, Harold Lilly, Midi Mafia, Tone Mason, Swizz Beatz
Professional reviews
Fantasia chronology
Free Yourself
(2004)
Fantasia
(2006)
TBA
(2009)
Singles from Free Yourself
  1. "Hood Boy"
    Released: 2007
  2. "When I See U"
  3. "Only One U"

Fantasia is the second studio album by American singer Fantasia Barrino, released by J Records on December 12, 2006.

In its first week of sales, Fantasia entered the U.S. Billboard 200 chart at number nineteen, with 133,000 discs sold.[1]In June 2007, Fantasia was certified Gold by the RIAA for sales over 500,000 copies.[2]

Contents

Recording

Missy Elliott returned as one of the writers on the album, joining Big Boi of Outkast and Diane Warren as contributors. Production duo Midi Mafia, best known for their 50 Cent hit "21 Questions", also contributed five tracks to the project.[3]

The beat for "Baby Makin' Hips" was created by Don Cheegro and Dirty Harry, new producers working under the guidance of Dre & Vidal, producers of Ludacris' song "War with God". Her second single "When I See U" peaked at number thirty-two on the Billboard Hot 100 and at number-one for eight weeks on the Urban charts. The music video for When I See U was shot by Lenny Bass on March 26, in Brooklyn.[citation needed]. Fantasia herself recently confirmed that her next single is going to be "Only One U".

Critical response

Critical response to Fantasia was largely positive, as reviewers praised her vocals and charisma as well as the albums production; she drew multiple comparisons to Aretha Franklin, Tina Turner and Patti LaBelle.[4][5][6] Rolling Stone magazine said the album "expands her range, adds some attitude and comes up with some genuine R&B gems."[4] Allmusic found it "a bolder, better album than Free Yourself," adding that it "breaks Barrino free of her American Idol persona, giving her a sound and style that she can build a career upon."[6] PopMatters.com said that "Fantasia is a solid second effort, made above average by that gem of a voice."[7] Many critics also commented that the album's decidedly R&B nature (which translates to a reduced audience) was inevitable due to the lack of crossover success from Barrino's debut.[5][6] Thomas Inskeep with Stylus magazine praised Fantasia's "rather astounding, multi-octave...voice, capable of the smoothest singing but also heavy on the grit," while at the same time lamenting that she will never be "America’s pop star...She’s too black." He then declared, "Fantasia wasn't meant to be America's pop star, anyway."[5] Sal Cinquemani with Slant Magazine said that "Fantasia's sophomore effort isn't exactly her Breakaway [Kelly Clarkson's hugely successful second album], but it's certainly a more unified artistic statement than 2004's Free Yourself."[8]

On December 6, 2007, Fantasia garnered three 50th Annual Grammy Award nominations: Best Female R&B Vocal Performance for “When I See U”, Best Contemporary R&B Album for Fantasia, and Best R&B Song for "When I See U".

Track listing

  1. "Hood Boy" (featuring Big Boi) –3:34
  2. "When I See U" –3:37
  3. "I Nominate U" –4:34
  4. "Baby Makin' Hips" –3:21
  5. "Not the Way That I Do" –3:35
  6. "Only One U" –4:00
  7. "I Feel Beautiful" –3:33
  8. "I'm Not That Type" –4:07
  9. "Uneligible" –3:00
  10. "Two Weeks Notice" –4:42
  11. "Surround U" –3:19
  12. "Bore Me (Yawn)" –2:55
  13. "Sunshine" –3:47
  14. "Bump What Your Friends Say" (featuring Missy Elliott) –4:44
  15. "Girl Like Me" (exclusive Wal-Mart bonus track) –4:20

Singles

  • "Hood Boy"
  • "When I See U"
  • "Only One U"

Charts

Chart (2006) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 19
U.S. R&B Billboard 200 3

Unreleased tracks

  • "Turn This Party Up" (Feat. Missy Elliott)
  • "Broke"
  • "Solo (So Low)"
  • "Said I Wouldn't (No More)"
  • "No Stoppin'" (produced by Missy Elliott) re-recorded by Monica
  • "Let It Go" (Feat. Missy Elliott) re-recorded by Keyshia Cole & Lil' Kim

References

  1. ^ Jonathan Cohen, "Young Jeezy, Hicks Enter Atop The Billboard 200", Billboard.com, December 20, 2006.
  2. ^ RIAA
  3. ^ Fantasia First Listen - AOL Music
  4. ^ a b Serpick, Evan (December 7, 2006). "Fantasia" RollingStone.com. Retrieved October 22, 2007
  5. ^ a b c Inskeep, Thomas (2007-01-02). "Fantasia" StylusMagazine.com. Retrieved October 22, 2007
  6. ^ a b c Erlewine, Stephen Thomas (2006). "Fantasia" AllMusic.com. Retrieved October 22, 2007
  7. ^ Joseph, Mike (January 5, 2007). "Fantasia" PopMatters.com. Retrieved October 22, 2007
  8. ^ Cinquemani, Sal (2006). "Fantasia" SlantMagazine.com. Retrieved October 22, 2007

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