I Am… | ||||
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Studio album by Nas | ||||
Released | April 6, 1999 | |||
Genre | Hip hop | |||
Length | 64:37 | |||
Label | Columbia CK-68773 |
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Producer | L.E.S., DJ Premier, Trackmasters, Timbaland, Alvin West, Dame Grease, Nashiem Myrick, Carlos "Six July" Broady, D-Moet, Pretty Boy, Jamal Edgerten | |||
Nas chronology | ||||
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Singles from I Am... | ||||
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I Am… is the third studio album by American rapper Nas, released April 6, 1999 on Columbia Records. It debuted #1 on the charts, selling over 470,000 copies in its first week. I Am… would later be certified 2x platinum in the United States. Upon its release, I Am... received generally mixed to positive reviews from music critics.
Contents |
This album was originally to have been a double album titled I Am...The Autobiography, however most of the original sessions were bootlegged forcing Nas to discard many songs and adjust the release to one disc. I Am...became one of the first major label releases to be widely leaked using MP3 technology.[1] Some of the leaked songs were later released on the compilation LP The Lost Tapes in 2002. The concept of this album as can be seen by tracks such as "Fetus" from The Lost Tapes was to be an autobiography of sorts for Nas. Although several bootleg versions have appeared on the internet over the years, an official version of the intended double album has never leaked and it remains unclear whether or not it was ever completed.
The two singles from I Am... were "Hate Me Now" and "Nas Is Like". "Hate Me Now" features Puff Daddy and is produced by D-Moet, Pretty Boy and The Trackmasters. It was a Billboard Hot 100 hit, and had a controversial music video directed by Hype Williams. The song had a version of the O Fortuna from Carl Orff's "Carmina Burana." "Nas Is Like" is one of two tracks produced by DJ Premier who scratches vocal samples from Nas' "It Ain't Hard To Tell" into the chorus. The "Nas Is Like" music video was directed by Nick Quested and is still very popular in underground circles and continued a long list of popular Nas/DJ Premier collaborations.
The album also contained the song "We Will Survive", a tribute to Tupac Shakur and Notorious B.I.G. The song criticized his peers, most notably Jay-Z, who "claimed to be New York's king" following B.I.G.'s death, the record has been cited as potentially encouraging the Nas vs. Jay-Z feud.
Famed photographer Danny Hastings has shot iconic cover images for Big Pun’s Capital Punishment and Raekwon’s Only Built 4 Cuban Linx, but his album art shoot for Nas’ I Am almost ended in disaster. In order to make the iconic mask featured on the cover, Hastings and his crew put a clay mold on his face and poked air holes so he could breathe, but he almost suffocated after clay got lodged in his nose.
“The funny part was that the first attempt, Nas was getting asphyxiated. We almost killed Nas," Hastings told MTV.com. “We cleaned him up, and he was like, 'Let's do it again!' […] Nas was a true sport."
He also explained the meaning behind the cover, and how it built off of previous album art for Illmatic and It Was Written. "The first one, you have him being a boy, very young. The second was a little bit older. And the third one, he was a king," he continued. "He already conquered the world. He was on top of the world. He was doing a lot of big things. We came with the concept of making a King Tut sarcophagus piece."[2]
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [3] |
Chicago Sun-Times | [4] |
Robert Christgau | (B-)[5] |
Entertainment Weekly | (B)[6] |
Los Angeles Times | [7] |
NME | (8/10)[8] |
Rolling Stone | [9] |
The Source | [10] |
The Village Voice | (mixed)[11] |
Yahoo! Music | (mixed)[12] |
Yahoo! Music's Billy Johnson, Jr. criticized the album's production as "somber" and described its songs as "thought-provoking, though average quality".[12] Jeff Stark of Salon noted "distinct identities" for each song and wrote that it does not sound "coherent", but "as if it belongs to a scattershot demographic of subway riders".[13] Franklin Soults of The Village Voice viewed that its music attempts to meet "halfway" with consumer demographics, noting that Nas' "most salient talent is finding and exploiting the middle ground".[11] In his consumer guide for The Village Voice, critic Robert Christgau gave I Am... a B- rating and named it "dud of the month",[5] indicating "a bad record whose details rarely merit further thought".[14] Christgau criticized Nas' "ethos" and stated, "The question is how convincing he is, and only two themes ring true: the bad ones, revenge and money. His idea of narrative detail is to drop brand names like Bret Easton Ellis; his idea of morality is everybody dies".[5] Craig Seymour of The Washington Post attributed its thematic inconsistency to the replacement of tracks that leaked to the Internet prior to the album's release, concluding that "Anyone with a good Web connection might wonder what a profound personal opus 'I Am' could have been".[15] Miles Marshall Lewis of LA Weekly viewed that Nas "tightrope[s] the line between order and chaos, gangsterism and enlightenment" on the album, which he found to be "not a horrendous album. But Nas has now established a pattern of declining album quality, and that makes I Am... Nas' worst album".[16]
Chicago Sun-Times writer Rebecca Little gave the album two-a-and-half out of four stars and stated, "if you get past the torrent of [profanity] and a few terms referring to women as dogs and garden tools, [...] 'I Am' is a notable effort", adding that "The finer moments lie in the rapper's trademark ability to spin a compelling tale about ghetto life".[4] Kris Ex of Rolling Stone gave it three-and-a-half out of five stars and stated, "Nas is still a diamond in the rough — perhaps the rawest lyrical talent of his day but lacking the guidance and vision to create a complete album [...] But what I Am... lacks in content, it makes up for in lyrical acumen; the album doesn't deliver the introspection its title implies, but it compensates for it in storytelling and craftsmanship. I Am... offers tantalizing hints of promise tethered by a need for pop acceptance".[9] Christopher John Farley of Time complimented Nas' lyrics and themes and the album's musical approach, noting "grander, more aggressive, more cinematic" songs.[17] Entertainment Weekly's Tom Sinclair compared the album to "a bona fide hip-hopera", noting string and keyboard-laden songs and "universal themes".[6] Los Angeles Times writer Soren Baker commended Nas for "adroitly balancing hard-core subject matter with production that should easily find its way onto urban radio".[7] Steve Jones of USA Today gave it four out of four stars and complimented Nas' "dense and deft rhymes" and "nimble, cinematic descriptions", writing that the album "nestles nicely between the underground grittiness of 1994's Illmatic and the high gloss of 1996's It Was Written".[18]
In a retrospective review, Allmusic editor M.F. DiBella gave the album three out of five stars and noted "blandness" in its production, writing that "Musically, I Am is somewhat unimaginative by Nas' stratospheric standards. [...] some of these tracks lack the sonic depth to do justice to the prophecies of the pharaoh, Nas".[3] However, DeBella added that Nas "still shines as the old soul storyteller and crime rhyme chronicler" on some tracks and cited "Nas Is Like" and "N.Y. State of Mind, Pt. 2" as highlights, adding that they "are nothing short of Illmatic perfection".[3] Steve Juon of RapReviews gave I Am... an eight-and-a-half out of 10 rating and viewed it as an improvement over It Was Written, praising Nas' "power of description" and "much improved" lyrics.[19] Writing in The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (2004), music journalist Chris Ryan gave the album two-and-a-half out of five stars and wrote that it has "[its] share of solid material, but ultimately fail[s] in the face of Nas' inability to navigate the divide between the street reporting that made him a legend and the commercial hits that made him a star".[20]
# | Title | Producer(s) | Samples | Length |
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1 | "Album Intro" |
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2:51 | |
2 | "N.Y. State of Mind Pt. II" | DJ Premier |
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3:36 |
3 | "Hate Me Now" (feat. Puff Daddy) | Pretty Boy, D. Moet, Poke & Tone |
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4:44 |
4 | "Small World" | Nashiem Myrick, Carlos Broady |
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4:45 |
5 | "Favor for a Favor" (feat. Scarface) | L.E.S. | 4:07 | |
6 | "We Will Survive" | Poke & Tone, Jamal Edgerten |
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5:00 |
7 | "Ghetto Prisoners" | Dame Grease | 4:00 | |
8 | "You Won't See Me Tonight" (feat. Aaliyah) | Timbaland | 4:22 | |
9 | "I Want to Talk to You" | L.E.S., Alvin West | 4:36 | |
10 | "Dr. Knockboot" | Poke & Tone |
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2:25 |
11 | "Life Is What You Make It" (feat. DMX) | L.E.S. |
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4:04 |
12 | "Big Things" | Alvin West | 3:39 | |
13 | "Nas Is Like" | DJ Premier |
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3:57 |
14 | "K-I-SS-I-N-G" | L.E.S., Alvin West |
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4:15 |
15 | "Money Is My Bitch" | Alvin West, Poke & Tone | 4:02 | |
16 | "Undying Love" | L.E.S. |
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4:23 |
Credits for I Am... adapted from Muze.[21]
Chart (1999) | Peak position |
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U.S. Billboard 200 | 1 |
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip Hop Albums | 1 |
UK Albums Chart | 31 |
Canadian Albums Chart | 2 |
Year | Song | Chart positions | |||
Billboard Hot 100 | Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks | Hot Rap Singles | |||
1999 | "Nas Is Like..." | #86 | #30 | #3 | |
"Hate Me Now" | #62 | #18 | #8 | ||
"You Won't See Me Tonight" | #121 | #44 | - | ||
"K-I-SS-I-N-G" | - | #50 | - |
Preceded by ...Baby One More Time by Britney Spears |
Billboard 200 number-one album April 24 - May 8, 1999 |
Succeeded by FanMail by TLC |
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