Still Standing (Monica album)

Still Standing
Studio album by Monica
Released March 19, 2010 (2010-03-19)
(see release history)
Recorded 2007–2010;
Carrington House, Doppler Studios, Zone 4 Studios
(Atlanta, Georgia)
Studio at the Palms
(Las Vegas, Nevada)
Genre R&B, soul
Length 39:30
Label J
Producer Monica Arnold (also exec.), Larry Jackson (co-exec.), Bryan-Michael Cox, Jermaine Dupri, Missy Elliott, Jim Jonsin, Cainon Lamb, Andre Lindal, Bei Maejor, Los Da Mystro, Ne-Yo, Polow da Don, Stargate, WyldCard
Monica chronology
The Makings of Me
(2006)
Still Standing
(2010)
New Life
(2012)
Singles from Still Standing
  1. "Everything to Me"
    Released: January 26, 2010 (2010-01-26)
  2. "Love All Over Me"
    Released: May 31, 2010 (2010-05-31)

Still Standing is the sixth studio album by American R&B recording artist Monica. It was released on March 19, 2010 by J Records, marking her third album on the label following the renewal of her contract in October 2007. Production for the album began in 2007 to 2010, featuring involvement by Missy Elliott, Bryan-Michael Cox, Stargate, and Jermaine Dupri, and was chronicled by Monica's BET reality series of the same name.

The album debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 184,000 in its first week, and reached the top of the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[1] Lead single "Everything to Me" became her first chart-topper in over seven years.[2] Second single "Love All Over Me" was released in May 2010 and reached number two on the R&B/Hip-Hop chart.[2] The album received mostly positive reviews, with critics perceiving its sound as "a return to the mid-'1990s heyday" of contemporary R&B.[3] A commercial success, Still Standing was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for shipments of 500,000 copies in the United States. The album was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, presented at the 53rd Grammy Awards in 2011.

Contents

Background

In 2006, Monica's fifth studio album The Makings of Me was released. For the production of the album, the singer had re-teamed with most of her regular contributors and although the final tracklisting comprised an outweighing slower set of mid-tempo recording and ballads, J Records settled on "Everytime tha Beat Drop," a heavily snap-influenced up-tempo record which had initially been recorded for a So So Def mixtape,[4] to lead the album — against the grain of the singer, who felt that the song did not speak to her core audience and was a poor representation of the album.[4] Upon its release, The Makings of Me failed to reprise the multi-million sales success of previous albums, barley selling 325,000 copies in the United States,[5] and while it produced four single releases, none of them managed to chart or sell noticeably, garnering Monica her least commercially successful project yet.[6]

Still during the promotion of the album, the singer acknowledged that she had to follow a more honest approach on her next project: "[The success of The Makings of Me] just made me realize that people want authentic Monica," she stated. "They don't want me to keep up with all the different gimmicks and trends that are taking place."[6] In late 2007, Monica started work on her follow-up album.[7] Intending to create a record that lived up to the sound her previous hits, particularly those from the 1990s, she expressed that she wanted to appeal to her existing fans although her label was concerned with making the project sound up to date:[8] "I am going back to where I started. The next album I would like people to get more songs like "Why I Love You So Much," "Angel of Mine," or the things they really, really love from me [...]."[9] Originally entitled Lessons Learned—a reference to the mistakes Monica felt she made with The Makings of Me[10] the singer decided to change the project after recording the album's title track in 2008 as she felt that Still Standing was more appropriate for the body of work that she and Bryan-Michael Cox pulled off.[11][12]

Recording

Recording for the album took place during 2007 to 2010 at several recording studios, including Carrington House, Doppler Studios, and Zone 4 Studios in Atlanta, Georgia, and Studio at the Palms in Las Vegas, Nevada.[13] Producers and songwriters having collaborated with Monica on the album include longtime collaborators Jermaine Dupri, Missy Elliott, Bryan-Michael Cox, and his co-producer WyldCard, as well as writers and producers that she had not worked with in the past, including Jim Jonsin, Bei Maejor, Andre Lindal, Los Da Mystro, singer Ne-Yo, songwriter Ester Dean, Norwegian production duo Stargte and her elder cousin Polow da Don.[14] Over the course of several recording periods, Monica worked on "hundreds of songs" for the album, herself serving as its executive producer and J Records A&R president Larry Jackson as co-executive.[14] Finally, only ten tracks were selected to be placed on the regular edition of Still Standing while three additional tracks were chosen to be released as free bonus tracks through different retailers. Others songs from established hitmakers such as Dallas Austin,[15] Babyface, Drumma Boy, J Ferrari, Sean Garrett,[15] Jazze Pha,[14] and Soulshock & Karlin did not make the cut.[11][12][16][17][18] Monica's team also was in negoations with R. Kelly to contribute to Still Standing.[18] In an interview, Lil Jon moreover stated that he was "about to do some work with Monica."[19]

Although the debut episode of the reality television show Monica: The Single on Peachtree TV was filmed to promote the release of the album's leading single, J Records and the singer were not in agreement with "Still Standing" becoming the first single,[12][20] and thus, Monica set up additional sessions with Missy Elliott in August 2009 to find new singles.[21] In parallel, she resumed recording with Polow da Don, Dallas Austin and Sean Garrett.[15] Whilst at Zone 4 Studios Timbaland had some creative input into the project, voicing his opinion about "Everything to Me" being a good future single choice, but did not make any musical contribution to the project.[15]

As part of her reality TV series, Monica revealed that she was planning to record all of her own backing vocals for the album.[22] Several tracks from the album's recording sessions leaked early which sparked a response from Monica on the eighth episode of her reality TV show: "I think it's unfair when a song like "Let Me Know" leaks. The fans don't get to hear it properly as its not finished. It might not be a true representation of the album if it is not included on the final tracklisting."[8] As a result of the leak, a small internal investigation was launched at J Records to find the source of the leak.[8]

Content

The production of opening track "Still Standing", one of the first songs written for the album, was tracked by the reality television show format Monica: The Single on Peachtree TV in 2008.[12] A well-received anthem about empowerment, starting with "an icy club-busting backbeat and a gothic, low-octave choir,"[23] it features guest vocals by Monica's cousin Ludacris and was initially considered to be released as the album's first single, but J Records rejected to promote the song as Still Standing′s lead.[20] Nevertheless, the track managed to debut within the top eighty on the US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and was used as the theme song of Monica: Still Standing the following year.[24] Second track, Los Da Mystro-crafted "One In a Lifetime", was among a number of songs that leaked a year prior to the album's official release. Announced as the album's leading single at a time,[25] the "lush, piano-laced" song deals with finding true love.[26] Ne-Yo-prenned third track "Stay or Go", one out of several tracks the songwriter and Monica worked on over a course of a week,[27] deals with a "if you’re not going to treat me right, then here’s the option"–nature, according to Monica. "He wanted to do a record that spoke to who I am," she said, "and he reached back into my history on how I’ve delivered records in a sassy yet vocal way."[28]

"Everything to Me", the album's fourth track and official first single, reunited Monica with producer Missy Elliott and saw the pair basically reprising the formula of previous successes such as "So Gone" (2003) and "A Dozen Roses (You Remind Me)" (2006).[29] A musical ode to all things good in life,[28] written by singer Jazmine Sullivan, the retro ballad contains a prominent sample of the Deniece Williams' 1981 recording "Silly." Released to rave reviews among critics, who noted it the album's "standout track — as solid as a brick house; great singing, great lyrics, great production, just a great all-around song,"[26] "Everything to Me" became the singer's most-successful release in years.[30] Elliott also contributed "If You Were My Man", one of the few up tempo songs on Still Standing, which Monica described as the song, who was most out of her character.[28] Originally entitled "Betcha", the track samples Evelyn "Champagne" King's 1982 record "Betcha She Don't Love You", featuring heavy elements of 1980's music, and garnered a mixed response by critics, whose reviews of the song alternated between "blemish,"[26] "brainless,"[23] and "funky".[31] "Mirror", the sixth track produced by Jim Jonsin, was recorded late into the production of the album. A song about self-acceptance, Monica noted the composition one of her personal standouts on the album: "Its basically about being able to look at yourself in the mirror and be completely happy with the person that you are," she said. "Having no shame or feeling pain again, and I am at that place in my life."[27]

Seventh track "Here I Am" was penned by Ester Dean and produced by Monica's elder cousin Polow da Don, marking their first collaboration. Led by a "bluesy guitar riff,"[32] the song deals with unrequired love, and has been announced as an official single from the album at numerous occasions, only to be replaced at the last minute each time.[33] In April 2010, Monica confirmed on Twitter that she had re-recorded the song as a duet with Jamie Foxx, although he was later replaced by fellow R&B singer Trey Songz.[34] "Superman", another production by Bryan Michael Cox, is an acoustic guitar-dominated ballad with syncopated drum pattern, in which she idolizes her man as a hero, comparing him with the same-titled DC Comics superhero.[28] The track received a positive response among critcs, who called it one of the finest moments on Still Standing: "Monica shows her range [...] and gives it some muscle."[31] The album's ninth song and second single, Cristyle-penned "Love All Over Me", is producer Jermaine Dupri's only contribution to the record. Monica described the song as "about being strictly in love where everything feels right."[28] Ending track "Believing In Me," an acoustic ode to moving beyond heartbreak, was contributed by Stargate.[28]

Release and promotion

After numerous delays Still Standing was eventually released on March 23, 2010 in the United States.[35] First released in the Netherlands on March 19, it received a limited release through RCA Records and Sony Music on most major music markets until the end of April 2010. The album's marked Monica's third album released under her contract with J Records, following the renewal of her joint venture with the label in October 2007.[11]

Prior to its release, Monica debuted her reality series Monica: Still Standing on the BET network on October 27, 2009.[36][37] She appeared on BET's 106 & Park on February 22, 2010 to promote the album,[38] and made further appearances as a guest or co-host on the show on March 22, 2010 and March 23, 2010.[39] On March 23, she also performed on CBS's The Early Show in promotion of the album.[39] On April 19, she performed on The Wendy Williams Show. At the 2010 BET Awards, the singer performed "Everything to Me" alongside Deniece Williams who sang on of her signature songs "Silly."[40] Monica also served as a co-header with Trey Songz on the 2010 Passion, Pain & Pleasure Tour in the following summer.

Singles

Confirmed as the first single from the album, "Everything to Me" was leaked onto internet in the first week of January 2010 and officially sent to urban and rhythmic radio formats on February 9, 2010.[41] Monica's highest peak since 2004 "So Gone", the song eventually became her sixth number one hit on the Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and remained seven weeks atop,[30] making it her longest-running solo number-one to date.[30] In addition, its peak made Monica the first artist to score chart-toppers in the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s.[30] A moderate success on the Billboard Hot 100, it also peaked at number forty-four on the regular pop chart.[30] The song also charted at number eight-five on the Japan Hot 100. The second single, "Love All Over Me" was sent to radio in May 2010. It peaked at number fifty-eight on the US Billboard chart and reached number two on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, becoming Monica's twelfth top ten hit on that chart.[30] In September 2010, "Here I Am", featuring Trey Songz, was confirmed as the album's third single.[42] The track features vocals by fellow singer Trey Songz.[34][43] A remix of "Here I Am" was initially planned as the third single but was only released as a digital download.[44] The album version of the song had previously debuted on the R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart at number eighty-three.

"Still Standing", featuring Ludacris was released as a buzz single from the album in August 2008. Despite being only sent to radio, it peaked at number seventy-four on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. "One In a Lifetime" peaked on the Japan Hot 100 charts at sixty-six due to airplay and digital sales.[45]

Reception

Commercial performance

Still Standing debuted at number two on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart with first week sales of 184,000 copies, becoming her second highest U.S. chart-debut, surpassed by her 2003's number-one debuting After the Storm.[1] The album also entered at number one on Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and at number two on the Digital Albums chart.[46][47] In the United Kingdom, it debuted at number twenty-five on the UK R&B Chart. The album was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, following shipments of 500,000 copies in the US.[48] To date, the album has sold over 474,000 copies in the United States.[49]

Critical response

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
About.com [26]
Allmusic [50]
Billboard (favorable)[32]
The Boston Globe (mixed)[51]
Boston Herald (B-)[31]
Entertainment Weekly (B+)[3]
NOW (4/5)[52]
Slant Magazine [23]
USA Today [53]
The Washington Post (favorable)[24]

Still Standing received positive reviews from most music critics.[54] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 71, based on six reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews".[54] Allmusic writer Andy Kellman gave it three-and-a-half out of five stars and commented that the album "benefits from quality control and a handful of particularly strong ballads".[50] About.com's Mark Edward Nero gave the album four out of five stars and called it "one of the stronger albums of Monica's career so far".[26] Giving it a B+ rating, Entertainment Weekly's Mikael Wood called the album "a low-key delight" and perceived its sound as reminiscent of 1990s-R&B, stating "the appealingly unflashy CD feels like a return to the mid-'90s heyday of acts such as Deborah Cox and Total".[3] USA Today's Edna Gundersen gave the album three out of four stars and called it "a gimmick-free set of cool R&B tracks".[53] Andrew Rennie of NOW gave it a four out of five rating and wrote that it is "is rich with songs about self-validation, love lost and subsequent recovery, and doesn’t let up on that thematic gas pedal until the last tune".[52]

However, The Boston Globe's Ken Capobianco viewed its songs as "predictable" and wrote "Monica is a vivid singer with gorgeous tone, but she’s forced to breathe life into songs that don’t live up to her capabilities".[51] Luke Winkie of Slant Magazine gave it two out of five stars and described its music as "unembellished and bland", while calling the album "immediately forgettable, inhabiting the colorless world that has doomed the majority of mainstream R&B over the last decade".[23] Despite writing that Monica "puts forth her richest vocal efforts", Boston Herald writer Lauren Carter called the album's songs "uninspiring", describing it as "the middle ground" and "r & b blandness".[31] Mariel Concepcion of Billboard wrote that Still Standing lacks "Monica's spunk and sass", but ultimately commended her lyrical maturity and called the album "fluid lyrically and musically".[32] The Washington Post's Sarah Godfrey complimented its production and Monica's musical style, stating "The disc is a lean 10 tracks, and while the sound is more mature than her 1995 debut 'Miss Thang', as it should be, her mellow style of R&B remains comfortingly intact".[24]

The album was nominated for a Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, presented at the 53rd Grammy Awards in 2011.[55]

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "Still Standing" (featuring Ludacris) Bryan-Michael Cox, Adonis Shropshire, Monica Arnold, Christopher Bridges Cox 4:14
2. "One in a Lifetime"   Carlos McKinney, Natalie Walker, Fendi Fleurimond Los da Mystro 4:31
3. "Stay or Go"   Bei Maejor, Shaffer Smith Bei Maejor, Ne-Yo 3:40
4. "Everything to Me"   Melissa Elliott, Cainon Lamb, Jazmine Sullivan, Fritz Baskett, Clarence McDonald, June Deniece Williams Missy Elliott 3:17
5. "If You Were My Man"   Elliott, Lamb, Sullivan, Michael Jones  Missy Elliott, Lamb 3:26
6. "Mirror"   James Scheffer, Andrew Fampton Jim Jonsin 4:17
7. "Here I Am"   Jamal Jones, Ester Dean, Paul Dawson, Arnold, Jason Perry, Mark Hartnett Polow da Don 3:43
8. "Superman"   Cox, Johntá Austin, Kevin D. Hicks, Kendrick Dean Cox, WyldCard 4:32
9. "Love All Over Me"   Jermaine Dupri, Cox, Crystal Johnson Dupri, Cox 3:50
10. "Believing in Me"   Phillip Jackson, Mikkel Eriksen, Tor Hermansen, Andre Lindal StarGate, Lindal 4:00
Sample credits

Personnel

Credits for Still Standing adapted from Allmusic.[56]

  • Adonis Shropshire - vocal producer, background vocals
  • Derek Blanks - photography
  • Monica - executive producer, producer, vocals, background vocals
  • Anita Marisa Boribbon - art direction, design
  • Candice Childress - production coordination
  • Bryan-Michael Cox - bass, drums, executive producer, instrumentation, keyboards, piano, producer, programming
  • D-Boi - drums, programming
  • Carlos "Los Da Mystro" McKinney - conductor, instrumentation
  • Melinda Dancil - management, producer
  • Danny D.- management
  • Kevin "KD" Davis - mixing
  • Jermaine Dupri - engineer, producer
  • Tony Duran - photography
  • Missy "Misdemeanor" Elliott - engineer, producer
  • Mikkel S. Eriksen - instrumentation
  • Paul J. Falcone - engineer, mixing
  • Ira Folson - engineer
  • Andrew Frampton - keyboards, producer
  • Moses Gallart - assistant
  • Mark Gary - assistant
  • Jazmine Sullivan - background vocals
  • Chris Gehringer - mastering
  • Erwin Gorostiza - creative director
  • Mark Gray - assistant
  • Tor Erik Hermansen - instrumentation
  • Kevin Hicks - additional production, guitar, programming
  • Aaron Holton - engineer
  • John Horesco IV - engineer
  • Josh Houghkirk - mixing assistant
  • Larry Jackson - producer
  • Jim Jonsin - arranger, keyboards, producer, programming
  • Damien Lewis - assistant, engineer
  • Andre Lindal - composer, instrumentation, producer
  • Bei Maejor - producer, background vocals
  • Rob Marks - mixing
  • Mylah Morales - make up
  • Ne-Yo - producer
  • Taurian "TJ" Osbourne - keyboards
  • Carlos Oyanedel - engineer
  • Dave Pensado - mixing
  • Polow da Don - producer
  • Geno Regist - engineer
  • Adrian "Drop" Santalla - engineer
  • Stargate - producer
  • Jay Stevenson - engineer
  • Noah Tafua - assistant
  • Phil Tan - mixing
  • Sam Thomas - engineer, mixing
  • Wouri Vice - stylist
  • Andrew Wuepper - assistant
  • WyldCard - additional production, keyboards, organ, strings, vocal producer

Charts and certifications

Chart

Chart (2010) Peak
position
Canadian Albums Chart[57] 191
UK R&B Albums Chart[58] 25
US Billboard 200[1] 2
US R&B/Hip-Hop Albums[46] 1

Year-end charts

Chart (2010) Position
US Billboard 200 48[59]

Certifications

Country Date Certification
(sales thresholds)
United States[60] April 21, 2010 Gold (RIAA)

Chart procession and succession

Preceded by
Battle of the Sexes by Ludacris
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums
number-one album

April 10, 2010
Succeeded by
Raymond v. Raymond by Usher

Release history

List of release dates, showing country, record label, and catalog number
Region Date Label Catalog
Netherlands[61][62] March 19, 2010 Sony Music 88697403982
United Kingdom[63] March 22, 2010 RCA Records 88697403982
United States[64] March 23, 2010 J 886974039822
Canada[65] RCA Records
Japan[66] April 7, 2010 Sony Music Japan SICP2506
Germany[67] April 9, 2010 Sony Music 88697403982

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External links