My Life II... The Journey Continues (Act 1) | ||||
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Studio album by Mary J. Blige | ||||
Released | November 21, 2011[1] | |||
Recorded | 2010-11 | |||
Genre | R&B, hip hop soul | |||
Length | 57:08 | |||
Label | Matriarch, Geffen | |||
Producer | Mary J. Blige (Executive) Jerry Wonda, Kendu Issac, Arden Altino, Rico Love, Pierre Medor, Danja, Darkchild, Eric Hudson, Jim Jonsin, Sean Garrett, Team S. Dot, BridgeTown, Tricky Stewart, Martin Terefe, The Underdogs, Harmony aka H-Money, Tank, Kevin Randolph, StarGate, Calvin Harris, Lil Ronnie, Brandon "B.A.M." Alexander" |
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Mary J. Blige chronology | ||||
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Singles from My Life II... The Journey Continues (Act 1) | ||||
My Life II... The Journey Continues (Act 1) is the tenth studio album by American R&B recording artist Mary J. Blige. Titled as the sequel to her 1994 album My Life, the album was released on November 21, 2011.
Contents |
It was confirmed in August 2010 that Blige had begun work on her tenth studio album with Swizz Beatz, Kanye West, The Underdogs, Jerry Wonda, Arden Altino, Lil Ronnie, Jay-Z, Timbaland, Salaam Remi, Maxwell, Alicia Keys, Raphael Saadiq, Ester Dean, J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, Johnta Austin, Eric Hudson, Q-Tip, Sean Garrett, DJ Premier, Gorilla Tek, Don Pooh, Ne-Yo, and Drumma Boy.[2][3][4][5][6][7] Reports claimed the album would be titled, LovHer and be released first quarter of 2011, but Mary revealed to Rap-Up. com during her Music Saved My Life Tour in 2010, she was in no rush to release the album and she had not given it a title as of yet.[8][9] A song called "Anything You Want" featuring Busta Rhymes and Gyptian leaked on line in August 2010.[10][11]
Blige revealed to MTV.com, backstage at the 2010 MTV Video Music Awards, that
“ | Swizz [Beatz] and I, [we're] in the studio cooking up something real nice." When speaking of approach to the new album it was described crafting sonic heat similar to her first two studio albums but plan to update the vintage Blige sound. "[It will be] more like a "What's the 411?" of 2012. It's headed [in] that direction but in a new [way]. Not what it used to be. Right now, it's going in the Mary direction, which is R&B and hip-hop and soul,... If it goes into the club direction, it will probably be more soulful than futuristic.[12] | ” |
Producer-songwriter Danja, confirmed that he had been heavily involved in the new album. He said of the records he's made with Blige
“ | Everything that I’ve done feels really good. Great tracks, funky, you can dance to it. Some is a hybrid of 808s with very heartfelt, soulful piano lines on top of them. You dancing and you in the club, but you kinda feeling a certain way at the same time. Very emotional topics and kinda classic Mary in 2011."[13] | ” |
Additionally it was revealed that singer-songwriter Kevin Cossom was also working with Blige, writing songs for her upcoming album.[14] The LP, recorded in Los Angeles, New York City and Atlanta, sees Mary looking toward the future while acknowledging the past.
“ | From me to you, My Life II… Our journey together continues in this life,” explained Mary. “It’s a gift to be able to relate and identify with my fans at all times. This album is a reflection of the times and lives of people all around me.”[15] | ” |
On June 21, 2011, a track titled "Feel Inside" apparently featuring Nicki Minaj leaked online. In an interview with MTV it was revealed that the track was in fact two separate songs that the duo were respectively working on, but that someone had put together. Blige revealed that despite the fake collaboration, Minaj and Blige would be collaborating on a song, written by Andrea Martin. "I was ****ed about the leaking of the Nicki Minaj and Mary J Blige record, because that's not fair and people shouldn't do that," she said bluntly. "But I'm over it. We move on. We're going to make more hot music."[16][17] The album will also see the return of Brook Lynn, Blige's rap alterego last heard on "Enough Cryin'" and the remix to "Touch It" by Busta Rhymes.[18]
Originally scheduled for a September 20, 2011 release,[19] the album was later pushed back to November 21, 2011. A deluxe edition for the album will also be available only in the United States.[20]
Mary J. Blige embarked on promotional tours and live performances for My Life II... The Journey Continues (Act 1) and its accompanying singles through the United Kingdom and North America. Promotion began with a live performance of the album's lead single on September 1, 2011 at Good Morning America.[21] Blige performed "25/8" on Dancing with the Stars[22] (October 4). On October 20, Blige debuted a new song from the album called, "Need Someone", at Perez Hilton's "One Night In… New York City" benefit concert for GLSN.[23] Blige also performed "Need Someone" on Later... with Jools Holland (November 1).[24] Blige was a guest on the UK morning show, Daybreak (November 2) and Alan Carr: Chatty Man (November 6) to discuss the new album and single.[25][26]
Throughout the month of November, Mary will be performing at numerous shows, including Black Girls Rock (November 6),[27] the TeenNick HALO Awards (November 6),[28] the American Music Awards (November 20),[29] Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade (November 24),[30] The Today Show (November 25),[31] Chelsea Lately (November 25),[32] CBS News Sunday Morning (November 27) and The View (November 29).[33] In addition to this, Blige will also embark on a U.S. tour to promote the album. On the tour Blige will perform the original My Life album in its entirety, with shows in Oakland (November 11), Los Angeles (November 17), New York City (November 23) and Atlanta (November 25).[34] The Los Angeles date will be shown live on Vevo November 17, 2011 at 11PM EST. The concert event, Mary J. Blige: UNSTAGED, will be directed by Adam Shankman.[35]
HSN & Mary J. Blige will air a special My Life Concert on November 30. In addition to this, Blige will be selling her perfume, My Life Blossom, during the special. Fans will have a chance to purchase the limited-edition My Life Blossom Holiday Gift Se,t including the My Life Blossom Eau de Parfum and Body Cream plus the HSN-Exclusive My Life II…The Journey Continues (Act 1) album.[36]
Blige performed "Need Someone" along with "Family Affair" at the ninth annual WWE Tribute to the Troops that aired on December 13, 2011 on the USA Network and December 17, 2011 on NBC.
On December 19, 2011, Blige will perform at "VH1 Divas Celebrates Soul".[37] Blige will also be performing on CBS' annual Home for the Holidays airing December 21.[38]
"25/8" was released for digital download on September 1, 2011, as the album's first single.[39] The song was produced, and co-written by Eric Hudson. Blige performed the song live for the first time at Good Morning America on September 2, 2011.[40] The song debuted on the Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs chart at number ninety-four, and has since peaked at number thirty-five.[41] "Mr. Wrong", featuring Drake, was released as the second single from the album on October 28, 2011.[42] The song is co-produced by Jim Jonsin and Rico Love.[43] "Mr. Wrong" impacted Urban radio on November 8, 2011.[44]
"Someone to Love Me (Naked)" was released as first promotional single of the album in March 2011. It's a reworked version of the song "Someone to Love Me" by Diddy Dirty-Money from their album "Last Train to Paris" and features Lil Wayne, and Diddy.[45] Produced by Jerry "Wonder" Duplessis, and Arden Altino, "Someone to Love Me (Naked)" samples "You Roam When You Don’t Get It At Home" performed by The Sweet Inspirations.[46] A music video for the song was premiered online on April 4, 2011.[47] Blige, and Wayne performed the song live for the first time at the 2011 Billboard Music Awards on May 22, 2011.[48] The song initially debuted on the Hot R&B/Hip Hop Songs chart at number ninety-nine before falling off, only to return, and subsequently peak at number twenty-eight. "The Living Proof" hit the internet on July 5, 2011. It serves as the official soundtrack for "The Help", and is produced by The Underdogs.[49] A music video for the song was released online on August 10, 2011.[50] The song debuted on Billboard's Adult Contemporary chart at number twenty-seven on November 3, 2011. The Chaka Khan remake, "Ain't Nobody", debuted on the Swiss Top 75 Singles chart at number 55.[51]
The album debuted at number five on the US Billboard 200, with first-week sales of 156,000 copies in the United States.[52] As of December 21, 2011, the album has sold 400,938 copies in the United States.[53]
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [54] |
The Daily Telegraph | [55] |
Entertainment Weekly | (B–)[56] |
The Guardian | [57] |
Los Angeles Times | [58] |
musicOMH | [59] |
PopMatters | (favorable)[60] |
Rolling Stone | [61] |
Slant Magazine | [62] |
Spin | (7/10)[63] |
My Life II... The Journey Continues (Act 1) received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 72, based on 15 reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[64] Martyn Young of musicOMH called it "a wonderfully assured collection of classy RnB pop that can justifiably rank amongst her best work", and commented that its ballads "are never grandiose or overblown and Blige’s perfectly poised vocals are genuinely affecting."[59] BBC Music's Lloyd Bradley dubbed the album "Blige's most enjoyable, exciting and consistent album in years" and complimented its music as a "clever updating" of her past hip hop soul.[65] The Daily Telegraph stated, "with the right collaborators [Blige] can conjure golden moments when the listener is transported simultaneously to the church pew and the dancefloor."[55] Rolling Stone writer Jody Rosen called Blige "admirably unfashionable, staying in her sweet spot of midtempo hip-hop soul", adding that "she can still make pain pleasurable."[61]
However, Andy Gill of The Independent was ambivalent towards its "bumpy emotional terrain", adding that "by the time she's berating some partner for not listening to her, your sympathies wane."[66] Kevin Ritchie of NOW panned the album's "easy-listening ballads" and characterized Blige's direction as "dull and predictable".[67] Entertainment Weekly's Adam Markovitz commented that "Blige can still rip your heart out with a note", but criticized "the lovelorn lyrics" and "'modern' touches".[56] Rebecca Nicholson of The Guardian called it "a surprisingly robust return to form [...] elegant, refined and, for the most, part up-to-date", but also found it "far too long" and criticized the "listlessness and sentimentality" of its ballads.[57] Slant Magazine's Eric Henderson disliked Blige's "lapses into self-pity", but commended the "slow burn" of the album's second-half as "her most credible adult-contemporary music since 1999's Mary."[62] Allmusic editor Andy Kellman stated, "Those who are hoping for something in the spirit of mid-‘90s Blige might be disappointed and think of the title as a ploy, but those who expect a wide variety of material in terms of style and mood will get precisely that."[54]
Los Angeles Times writer Mikael Wood stated, "She gets away with the dramatics because she makes them so easy to buy: No working soul singer depicts struggle (and its hard-won defeat) more believably than Blige does, even when armed with so-so material, as she often is here."[58] Although he found its ballads "a little toothless", Evan Rytlewski of The A.V. Club stated, "What My Life II lacks in a single vision, though, it makes up for with consistently rousing performances from Blige, whose radiant voice has only grown fuller and bluesier with time."[68] Peter S. Scholtes of Spin complimented the "funky, mid-tempo beauties such as 'Irreversible,' 'Midnight Drive,' and 'Someone to Love Me (Naked)'" and stated, "Amid overwrought theatrical gestures, MJB still finds a slinky groove".[63] David Masciotra of PopMatters commented that "despite its flaws, [it] is an immensely enjoyable and impressive album", commending its "four song, mid-album set of soulful R&B" and "closing trio of ballads".[60]
US Standard edition [69] | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | |||||
1. | "Intro" | Mary J. Blige, Jerry Duplessis, Kendu Isaac, Arden Altino, Sean Combs | Jerry Wonda, Kendu Isaacs, Arden Altino (co.) | 1:16 | |||||
2. | "Feel Inside" (featuring Nas) | Blige, Andrea Martin, Duplessis, Altino, Nasir Jones, Dennis Coles, Robert Diggs, Gary Grice, Lamont Hawkins, Darryl Hill, Jason Hunter, Russell Jones, Clifford Smith, Elgin Turner, Corey Woods | Jerry Wonda, Arden Altino (co.) | 5:07 | |||||
3. | "Midnight Drive" (featuring Brook Lynn) | Richard Butler, Jr., Pierre Medor | Rico Love, Pierre Medor | 4:12 | |||||
4. | "Next Level" (featuring Busta Rhymes) | Blige, Butler, Trevor Smith, Jr., N. Hills | Danja | 4:13 | |||||
5. | "Ain't Nobody" | David "Hawk" Wolinski | Darkchild | 4:03 | |||||
6. | "25/8" | Blige, Crystal Johnson, Eric Hudson, Kenneth Gamble, Leon Huff | Eric Hudson, Mary J. Blige | 3:55 | |||||
7. | "Don't Mind" | Blige, Priscilla Renea, Duplessis | Jerry Wonda | 3:57 | |||||
8. | "No Condition" | Blige, Kevin Cossom, M. Aracia, Hills | Danja | 4:27 | |||||
9. | "Mr. Wrong" (featuring Drake) | James Scheffer, Aubrey Drake Graham, Butler, Daniel Morris, Gamble, Huff, C. Gilbert | Jim Jonsin, Rico Love | 4:01 | |||||
10. | "Why" (featuring Rick Ross) | Blige, Dave Young, Hudson | Eric Hudson | 4:21 | |||||
11. | "Love a Woman" (featuring Beyoncé) | Blige, Sean Garrett, Beyoncé Knowles, Menardini Timothee | Sean "The Pen" Garrett, Team S. Dot (co.), BridgeTown (add.) | 4:31 | |||||
12. | "Empty Prayers" | Blige, Christopher Stewart, Johnson, Kenneth Coby | Tricky Stewart, Soundz | 3:15 | |||||
13. | "Need Someone" | Matt Morris | Martin Terefe | 3:55 | |||||
14. | "The Living Proof" | Blige, Thomas Newman, Harvey Mason, Damon Thomas | The Underdogs | 5:55 | |||||
Total length:
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57:08 |
US Deluxe edition additional tracks | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | |||||
15. | "Irreversible" (inserted as track #12 between "Love a Woman" and "Empty Prayers") | Blige, Christopher Gholson, Tre' Shon Jenkins | Harmony aka H-Money | 3:06 | |||||
16. | "Miss Me With That" | Thomas Newman, Harvey Mason, Damon Thomas, Blige, Durrell Babbs | The Underdogs, Tank | 4:00 | |||||
17. | "Someone to Love Me (Naked)" (featuring Lil Wayne & Diddy) | Blige, Duplessis, Combs, Leroy Watson, Betty Crutcher, David Poter, Tony Williams, Dwayne Carter | Jerry Wonda, Arden Altino (co.) | 3:32 | |||||
Total length:
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68:13 |
UK edition additional tracks[70][71] | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | |||||
15. | "You Want This" | Blige, Mason, Thomas, Eric Dawkins, Joi Campbell, Adonis Shropshire, Kevin Randolph | The Underdogs, Kevin Randolph (co.) | 4:14 | |||||
16. | "This Love Is for You" | Blige, Ester Dean, Stewart | Tricky Stewart | 3:46 | |||||
17. | "One Life" | Blige, Dean, Mikkel S. Eriksen, Tor Erik Hermansen, Calvin Harris | StarGate, Calvin Harris | 3:43 | |||||
18. | "Someone to Love Me (Naked)" (featuring Lil Wayne & Diddy) | Blige, Duplessis, Combs, Leroy Watson, Betty Crutcher, David Poter, Tony Williams, Dwayne Carter | Jerry Wonda, Arden Altino (co.) | 3:32 | |||||
Total length:
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72:23 |
US iTunes Store bonus track[72] | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | |||||
18. | "Get It Right" (featuring Taraji P. Henson) | Blige, Crystal Johnson, Ronnie Jackson | Lil Ronnie, Brandon "B.A.M." Alexander | 4:08 | |||||
Total length:
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74:21 |
UK iTunes Store bonus track[73] | |||||||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length | |||||
19. | "Get It Right" (featuring Taraji P. Henson) | Blige, Crystal Johnson, Ronnie Jackson | Lil Ronnie, Brandon "B.A.M." Alexander | 4:08 | |||||
Total length:
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76:31 |
Chart (2011) | Peak position |
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Dutch Albums Chart[74] | 95 |
Italian Albums Chart[75] | 96 |
Swiss Albums Chart[76] | 31 |
US Billboard 200[77] | 5 |
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 2 |
Region | Date | Format | Label | Edition |
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Australia [78] | November 18, 2011 | CD, digital download | Geffen | Standard |
Austria [79] | ||||
Germany[80] | ||||
Japan [81] | ||||
Netherlands [82] | ||||
New Zealand [83] | ||||
Spain [84] | ||||
Sweden [85] | ||||
Switzerland [86] | ||||
Canada [87] | November 21, 2011 | |||
France [88] | ||||
United Kingdom [89] | Polydor Records | |||
United States [90] | Matriarch, Geffen | Standard, deluxe |
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