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The Reason (Beanie Sigel album)
2001 studio album by Beanie Sigel From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Reason is the second studio album by Philadelphia rapper Beanie Sigel, released on Roc-A-Fella Records. Originally scheduled for a June 12, 2001 release, the album was ultimately released June 26, 2001. The album contains 14 tracks, and special guests include Memphis Bleek, Jay-Z, Freeway, Omillio Sparks, Scarface, Daz, Kurupt, and Rell.
It received positive reviews from critics divided over Sigel's lyrical abilities as a rapper. The Reason debuted at number five on the Billboard 200 and spawned two singles: "Beanie (Mack Bitch)" and "Think It's a Game".
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Reception
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Critical reception
The Reason garnered positive reviews from music critics who commended the record's East Coast production but questioned Sigel's abilities as a credible rapper. Andy Capper of NME found some familiarity in the album's beats but praised Sigel's dark-yet-intriguing delivery along with a talented list of guest artists, calling it "one of the best hardcore rap records of the year 2001."[6] Steve 'Flash' Juon of RapReviews praised the lyrical delivery and production for being an upgrade from Sigel's debut effort The Truth, saying that, "[I]n the pantheon of Philadelphia rap from The Roots to Will Smith, make room for a mack (bitch) - he's definitely earned his right to shine."[8] Entertainment Weekly's Evan Serpick said that, "Sigel will never sound as urgent as Chuck D or as smooth as Method Man, but the Jay-Z protégé makes up for it with smarter-than-average gangsta lyrics and eclectic hip-hop beats."[3] Nick Catucci of Blender wrote that, "Throughout the disc, Beanie stalks through the subdued bounce of big, loose piano and horn riffs, his smooth but steely flow intact. There's a sequel to his first album's not-so-pretty prison tale "What Ya Life Like" here, but it's best hearing about Beans's life when he's feeling nice, not nasty."[2]
AllMusic writer Bret Love commended the production for remaining consistent and Sigel's persona of a street smart hustler but found it running its course as the album continued, concluding that "Sigel's sophomore effort isn't so much an artistic step forward as it is a step sideways."[1] HipHopDX writer Affrikka said that despite the first two tracks, the record starts to fall off into mediocre un-originality, saying that "Overall, the experience leaves you wanting more from the executive producing credit that Jay-Z takes. It’s almost as if anyone involved in this project expected listeners to not get past the first couple songs."[4] Soren Baker, writing for the Los Angeles Times, commented that "[T]he normally assertive and interesting Philadelphia rapper flows like a sloth on nearly every cut of his second album, failing to elicit much excitement despite the solid, hard-core production."[5] Robert Christgau graded the album as a "dud",[9] indicating "a bad record whose details rarely merit further thought."[11]
Commercial performance
The Reason debuted at number five on the Billboard 200 selling 151,000 copies in its first week.[12] On its second week, it dropped to number 11 with sales dropping 50% to 75,000 copies.[13]
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Track listing
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Samples
- "Nothing Like It" contains a sample from "Ain't Nothing Like the Real Thing", written by Nickolas Ashford and Valerie Simpson, and performed by The Dynamic Superiors.
- "So What You Saying" contains samples of:
- "If It Don't Turn You One", written by William Nichols and Allen Williams, and performed by B.T. Express.
- "One Nation Under a Groove", written by George Clinton, Walter Morrison, and Garry Shider.
- "Get Down" contains a sample of "The Lost Man", written and performed by Quincy Jones.
- "Man's World" contains a sample from "It's a Man's Man's Man's World", written by James Brown and Betty Jean Newsome, and performed by James Brown.
- "Mom Praying" contains a sample of "It Ain't Gonna Rain On Nobody's Parade But Mine", written by Harvey Scales, and performed by The Dramatics.
- "Still Got Love for You" contains a sample of "Ike's Mood I", written and performed by Isaac Hayes.
- "What Your Life Like 2" contains a sample of "Quasimodo's Marriage", written by Alec R. Costandinos and Michael Jouveaux, and performed by Alec R. Costandinos and The Syncophonic Orchestra.
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Personnel
- Kamel Abdo – engineer (1), assistant engineer (5, 7, 8, 10, 14), mixing (10), assistant mix engineer (13)
- Tony Dawsey – mastering
- DJ Scratch – scratching (3)
- Just Blaze – mixing (12, 13), scratching (4)
- Kareem "Biggs" Burke – executive producer
- Shawn Carter – executive producer
- Damon Dash – executive producer
- Supa Engineer DURO – mixing (2)
- Jason Goldstein – mixing (13)
- Kyambo "Hip-Hop" Joshua – co-executive producer
- Gimel "Young Guru" Keaton – engineer (1–14), mixing (12)
- Jonathan Mannion – photography
- Midnite – assistant engineer (4, 6, 9, 12)
- Saint Nick – additional vocals (8)
- Joe "Chef" Quinde – mixing (3, 7–9)
- Beanie Sigel – co-executive producer
- Tony Vanias – recording coordinator
- Doug Wilson – mixing (1, 4–6, 10, 11, 14)
- Shane "Bermy" Woodley – assistant engineer (2, 3, 11)
Charts
Singles chart positions
References
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