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| Length = 50:57
| Length = 50:57
| Label = [[Universal Motown]]
| Label = [[Universal Motown]]
| Producer = Mýa Harrison <small>(exec.)</small><br /> [[Carvin & Ivan]]<br /> [[Bryan Michael Cox]]<br /> [[Noel "Detail" Fisher]]<br /> [[Kwamé]]<br /> Paula Pete<br /> [[J. R. Rotem]]<br /> [[Tricky Stewart]]<br /> [[Scott Storch]]<br /> [[WyldCard]]<br />
| Producer = Mýa Harrison <small>(exec.)</small>, [[Carvin & Ivan]], [[Bryan Michael Cox]], [[Noel "Detail" Fisher]], [[Kwamé]], Paula Pete, [[J. R. Rotem]], [[Tricky Stewart]], [[Scott Storch]], [[WyldCard]]
| Reviews =
| Reviews =
* ''[[Blender (magazine)|Blender]]'' {{rating|2.5|5}} [http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=4736 link]
* ''[[Blender (magazine)|Blender]]'' {{rating|2.5|5}} [http://www.blender.com/guide/reviews.aspx?id=4736 link]

Revision as of 19:40, 29 July 2009

Untitled

Liberation is the fourth studio album by American singer Mýa, released by Universal Motown on 22 October 2007 in Japan as a digital download only. The album marks the singer's only release on the Motown label, which she left the year after.

The album involves production by Scott Storch and J. R. Rotem, with additional production from Bryan Michael Cox, Kwame and Tricky Stewart, among others, and features guest appearances by rappers Snoop Dogg, Lil Wayne, and Charli Baltimore. Liberation spawned two singles, including the Scott Storch-produced "Lock U Down" and R&B-ballad "Ridin'." Both singles failed to make an impact at radio and on the charts, and thus, after numerous delays in the United States, the album was shelved as a domestic release.[1]

Conception and production

Intermitted by several recording pauses, the singer had been working on her fourth studio album on and off since 2004. Originally conceived as a project called Control Freak, her first release with the A&M Records label, the album's first version was actually announced for a summer 2005 release, involving main production by Scott Storch, Dr. Dre, Jodeci, Lil Jon, Rockwilder and songwriter Sean Garrett.[2] Mýa who took control of the album in her own hands by producing part of the record herself, described the album as "a combination of a Gwen Stefani, because it's energetic, and Lil Jon, very ghetto," with a less classic R&B edge,[3] exlaining further: "Control Freak is basically learning how to gain control of a situation yourself, gaining control in order to be [a] free and beautiful person in life."[2][4] However, although she intended to release a dance track called "Let It Go" at a particular time,[5] she eventually decided to leave both her management and A&M Records in fall 2005 due to personal differences, before signing a new contract with Motown Records.[6]

During the following months Mýa began consulting a few other producers to collaborate on the album, renamed Liberation, including Tim & Bob, Bryan Michael Cox, Kwamé, J. R. Rotem and Tricky Stewart.[6] In search of a new vibe for the album, she drew inspiration by leaving Los Angeles, California and moving back to Washington, D.C., where she spent her formative years. "I just knew that I had to get back to my roots and rediscover what had made me excited in the first place," she said in an interview with Billboard magazine. "I have all this creative energy and all these ideas but LA it was too impersonal of a place to develop a real creative family."[6] Back home, Mýa bought a house and enlisted her brother to build a recording studio, where she began experimenting, laying down rudimentary tracks and learning how to engineer. Pushed by her newfound abilities in mixing and production, Mýa once again intensified work on the re-worked Control Freak album, with most of it eventually being completed in a stretch of only three month.[1] "It was an easy process because I knew what I wanted to do when I went in," she commented, comparing the making of the album with a therapy. "I've been honest with myself and have been able to admit some things and analyze myself and save myself at the end of the day [...] Liberation is a clean slate; my most expressive, vulnerable album."[7]

Release and reception

"I feel as though Liberation was my best project to date, of course I wanted it released in the US, but things happen, so maybe it wasnt meant to be [...]"

Mýa, ThatGrapeJuice

Although a release date for the album was announced numerous times since 2004, more than two years passed until Liberation was eventually brought on the music market in 2007. Originally expected to drop under a different title in 2005, the album was repeatedly bumped from the U.S. schedule, lastly in September 2007 — at a time when Mýa had already started work on follow-up album Sugar & Spice (2008).[8] While the singer appointed the delay to "litigations, court, transitioning from label to label, teaching kids [at the Mya Art & Tech Foundation] and building a studio" at first,[9] the delays were actually caused by "business related" differences: "It's just business you know," Mýa explained, "the music industry is suffering so record companies have to scrap for money. Plus I would rather wait for them to get it right before I do an album."[1] As a result, Liberation received a digital-limited release in Japan only on 22 October 2007.

Reviewed by a few American critics only, Liberation garnered a generally mixed reception. Dorian Lynskey of Blender magazine gave the album two and a half stars out of five, stating: "A decade into her career, two songs raise the 27-year-old’s game — the insidious snake-charmer melody of “'Walka Not a Talka' and the bracing blast of betrayed-housewife rage of 'All in the Name of Love.' Elsewhere, boilerplate slow jams and generic sass paint Mya, her claims to the contrary, as a talka not a walka."[10]

Musical Content

Songs

Introduced by the words of Mýa's definition of the word Liberation, Liberation opens with the Kwamé-produced I Am. One of many uptempo recordings on the album, I Am was written and produced by Mýa and Kwamé. Walka Not A Talka, the album's third track was written and produced by Mýa and J. R. Rotem and features West Coast rapper Snoop Dogg. The song was considered a single at one point by Mýa's label Motown. The Scott Storch-produced Still A Woman is the album's fourth track and was written by Mýa and Scott Storch. The song itself tells the story a woman who an independent woman but needs a man's touch at the end of the day. No Touchin', the album's fifth track was produced by Noel "Detail" Fisher. It is one of the sensual songs on the album. Lock U Down is the album's sixth track and first single. Lock U Down was written by Mýa and Dwayne Carter and produced by Scott Storch. The single was a commercial failure and failed to make an impact at radio and on the charts. Track seven Lights Go Off is a mid-tempo song produced by Carvin & Ivan. The song starts out with Mýa's man leaving her a voice message and ends with another girl answering Mýa's boyfriends phone. It the beginning of the storyline and intro to the album's second single. Ridin', the album's second single and eighth track was written by Mýa, Jevon Sims, Esther Dean, and Traci Hale and produced by Tricky Stewart. The song is inspired by a relationship Mýa was in at one point. Ridin' was a minor success on the charts, reaching number fifty-eight on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart and the album's final release. The Carvin & Ivan-produced Switch It Up is the album's ninth track and was a favorite among music critics. Give A Chick A Hand, is a Crunk&B-inspired song written by Mya and produced by Paula Pete. The song itself tells the story of a woman giving kudos to the next woman who stole her man. All In The Name Of Love, the album's eleventh track was produced by J. R. Rotem. It incoporates the movie Halloween theme music. Life's Too Short, is the album's second ballad and twelfth track. The song was written and produced by Mýa and Bryan Michael Cox. It is one of Mýa's favorite track on the album for personal reasons. Nothin' At All, is the album's final track. It was produced by Tricky Stewart and written by Mýa herself. The song itself tells the story of Mýa's career in the music industry and the up's and down's that comes with the price of fame.

Tracklisting

  1. "Liberation" – 0:18
  2. "I Am" (featuring Charli Baltimore) (Mýa Harrison, Kwamé Holland) — 3:49
  3. "Walka Not a Talka" (featuring Snoop Dogg) (Mýa Harrison, Lyrica Anderson, Evan Bogart, Calvin Broadus, J. R. Rotem) — 3:35
  4. "Still a Woman" (Mýa Harrison, Scott Storch) — 3:57
  5. "No Touchin’" (Mýa Harrison, Noel "Detail" Fisher) — 4:04
  6. "Lock U Down" (featuring Lil Wayne) (Mýa Harrison, Scott Storch, Dwayne Carter) — 3:37
  7. "Lights Go Off" (Mýa Harrison, Ivan "Orthodox" Barias, Carvin "Ransum" Haggins) — 6:23
  8. "Ridin'" (Mya Harrison, Christopher Stewart) — 4:18
  9. "Switch It Up" (Mýa Harrison, Ivan Barias, Carvin Haggins) — 4:43
  10. "Give a Chick a Hand" (Mýa Harrison, Paula Pete) — 4:13
  11. "All in the Name of Love" (Mýa Harrison, J. R. Rotem) — 3:31
  12. "Life Is Too Short" (Mýa Harrison, Bryan Michael Cox, Kendrick Dean) — 4:00
  13. "Nothin’ at All" (Mýa Harrison, Christopher Stewart) — 4:43

Leftover tracks

Tour

References

  1. ^ a b c Bass, Andrew (2007-08-15). "Interview: Mya, R&B Sensation". Assoicated Content. Retrieved 2008-10-29.
  2. ^ a b Reid, Shaheem (2005-02-25). "Mya Is Murderous Onscreen And A Control Freak On Record". MTV News. VH1 News. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
  3. ^ Nand, Ashlene. "Ashlene's Spotlight Interview - MYA". Ashlene Online. Mediasearch. Retrieved 2008-10-19.
  4. ^ a b c Baltin, Steve (2005-02-15). "Mya Takes Control". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 2008-10-19.
  5. ^ a b "For The Record". MTV News. Retrieved 2007-05-19.
  6. ^ a b c Rodriguez, Jason (2006-09-21). "Mya Gives Up Grudges And Ego, Picks Up Relationship Wisdom On Liberation". MTV News. VH1. Retrieved 2007-05-19. Cite error: The named reference "vh13" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  7. ^ Faber, Judy (2006-08-30). "Mya And JoJo's Girls' Night Out". CBS News. Retrieved 2008-10-29.
  8. ^ Nero, Mark Edward (2007-01-01). "2007 R&B Music Preview". About.com. Retrieved 2008-10-29.
  9. ^ Concepcion, Mariel (2007-04-210). "Mya 'Liberated' On New Album With Storch, Cox". Billboard. Retrieved 2007-05-19. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  10. ^ Lynskey, Dorian. "Liberation review". Billboard. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Windswept Monthly" (PDF). Windswept Pacific. Retrieved 2007-04-29.
  12. ^ a b "Preview". Rap-Up. Retrieved 2007-05-21.
  13. ^ "Def Jam Has Found Ne-Yo's Replacement". SOHH Blog. Retrieved 2007-08-25.