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|Single 6 date = May 15, 2007
|Single 6 date = May 15, 2007
|Single 7 = [[Green Light]]
|Single 7 = [[Green Light]]
|Single 7 date = July 27, 2007
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Revision as of 00:30, 11 April 2010

Untitled

B'Day is the second studio album by American R&B singer Beyoncé Knowles, released September 4, 2006, on Columbia Records in collaboration with Music World Music and Sony Urban Music. Its release coincided with Knowles' twenty-fifth birthday. The album was originally planned for a 2004 release as a follow-up to her debut album Dangerously in Love (2003). However, the project was put on hiatus due to the recording of Destiny's Child's final studio album Destiny Fulfilled and her starring role in the 2006 movie Dreamgirls.

While on vacation after filming for Dreamgirls, Knowles began contacting various producers; she had employed technique for faster collaboration, and completed B'Day in three weeks. Most of the lyrical content of the album was inspired by Knowles' role in the film. The album's musical style ranges from '70s to '80s funk and balladry to urban contemporary elements such as hip hop and R&B. Live instrumentation was employed on most tracks as part of Knowles' vision of creating a record using live instruments.

The album debuted at number one on the U.S. Billboard 200 chart, selling 541,000 copies in its first week, and it has been certified triple platinum in sales by the RIAA. It was also successful in international music markets and yielded six singles, including three worldwide hits, "Déjà Vu", "Irreplaceable", and "Beautiful Liar". Upon its release, B'Day received generally positive reviews from most music critics and earned Knowles several accolades, including a Grammy Award for Best Contemporary R&B Album at the 49th Grammy Awards.

Conception

Background

Cover shows a woman singing on stage, wearing a silver gown with straps falling over one arm and long, curly, wild hair.
Knowles singing "Listen", which was inspired by her role in the film Dreamgirls

In 2002, Knowles had generative studio sessions in the making of her debut album, Dangerously in Love, recording up to forty-five songs.[1] After the release of Dangerously in Love in 2003, Knowles had planned to produce a follow-up album using several of the left-over tracks.[1] However, on January 7, 2004, a spokesperson for her record label, Columbia, announced that Knowles had put her plans on hiatus in order to concentrate on the recording of Destiny's Child's final studio album, Destiny Fulfilled, and for her singing of the U.S. national anthem at the Super Bowl XXXVIII in Houston, which was her childhood dream.[2] In late 2005, Knowles decided to postpone the recording of her second album because she had landed the starring role in the film adaptation of the 1981 Tony Award-winning Broadway musical Dreamgirls.[3] As she wanted to focus on one project at a time, Knowles decided to wait until the movie would wrap up before returning to the studio.[4] Knowles told Billboard magazine, "I'm not going to write for the album until I finish doing the movie."[5]

While having a month-long vacation after filming Dreamgirls, Knowles went to the studio to start working on the album. She said, "[When filming ended] I had so many things bottled up, so many emotions, so many ideas",[4] prompting her to begin working without telling her father-record label manager Mathew Knowles.[6] People who knew she went to the studio were her A&R man Max Gousse, and the team of producers they contacted to collaborate for the album.[7] Knowles began working with songwriter-producers Rich Harrison, Rodney Jerkins, and Sean Garrett.[6][8] She also collaborated with several studio personalities: Cameron Wallace; the Neptunes, Norwegian production duo Stargate, American hip hop producer-rapper Swizz Beatz, and Walter Millsap.[9] Two female songwriters were also included in the production team who helped structure the album: Knowles' cousin Angela Beyincé, who had previous collaborations in Dangerously in Love, and up-and-coming songwriter Makeba Riddick, who actually made her way onto the team after writing "Déjà Vu", the lead single of the album.[4]

Recording

Influenced by Jay-Z's method of simultaneously collaborating with multiple record producers,[10] Knowles rented Sony Music Studios in its entirety in New York City and booked Harrison, Jerkins and Garrett, each with a room to work in.[6] During sessions, Knowles would move from studio to studio to check her producers' progress, later claiming this fostered "healthy competition" among producers.[6] When Knowles conceived of a potential song, she would tell the group who would deliberate, and after three hours, the song would be created.[4] While Knowles and the team brainstormed on the lyrics, other collaborators like the Neptunes, Jerkins and Swizz Beatz would simultaneously produce the tracks.[4] They would sometimes begin working at eleven o'clock, reaching fourteen hours a day during the recording process.[4] Knowles arranged, co-wrote and co-produced all the songs.[6] Makeba Riddick of MTV News later said of the production experience:

She had multiple producers in Sony Studios. She booked out the whole studio and she had the biggest and best producers in there. She would have us in one room, we would start collaborating with one producer, then she would go and start something else with another producer. We would bounce around to the different rooms and work with the different producers. It was definitely a factory type of process.[4]

— Makeba Riddick

Swizz Beatz co-produced four songs for the album, the most from a single producer in the team.[4] Knowles recorded three songs a day, finishing recording within two weeks.[7] B'Day, which is coined as tribute to Knowles' birthday,[11] was completed in three weeks, ahead of the originally planned six-weeks.[12] Twenty-five songs were produced for the album; ten of the tracks were selected for the track list, and mastered in early July.[13]

Music

Style and themes

B'Day was musically crafted from a variety of American genres,[14] and like the roots of her previous album, incorporated urban contemporary elements including contemporary R&B and hip hop. Some songs have '70s and '80s styles, inspired through record sampling. "Suga Mama", which employs blues-guitar samples[15] from Jake Wade and the Soul Searchers' "Searching for Soul", reminds a '70s funk-flavored and '80s go-go influenced melody.[16] "Upgrade U" is sampled from the Betty Wright's 1968 "Girls Can't Do What the Guys Do". "Resentment", on the other hand, used Curtis Mayfield's 1972 "Think (Instrumental)", from the Super Fly soundtrack. "Déjà Vu" has '70s influence,[17] "Green Light" is a classic groove,[18] and "Get Me Bodied" features twang, a musical style originated from Texas.[19]

Knowles crafted most songs in B'Day through live instrumentation. Evident on the song "Déjà Vu", the track utilizes bass guitar, conga, hi-hat, horns and the 808.[18] In an interview, Knowles said, "When I recorded 'Déjà Vu' ... I knew that even before I started working on my album, I wanted to add live instruments to all of my songs..."[4] While "Déjà Vu" employs a production of old school horns,[20] other songs like "Ring the Alarm" uses percussion and "Irreplaceable" features a guitar-driven melody.[21]

Much of the theme and musical style of the album were inspired by Knowles' role in Dreamgirls. The plot of the film revolves around The Dreams, a fictional '60s group of three female singers who had changed in plight after discovering their manipulative manager, Curtis Taylor. Knowles portrays Deena Jones, the lead singer of the group and the wife of Taylor, and is emotionally abused by him. Because of her role, Knowles was inspired to produce an album with an overriding theme of feminism and female empowerment.[4] In the bonus track, "Encore for the Fans", Knowles says, "Because I was so inspired by Deena, I wrote songs that were saying all the things I wish she would have said in the film."[22]

Content

"Déjà Vu", which features rap from Jay-Z, is the opening track of B'Day. Set as the album's lead single, it was released in July 2006 to mixed reviews.[8][20] The single reached number four in the U.S., and number one in the UK. "Get Me Bodied" features former band-mates Kelly Rowland and Michelle Williams and sister Solange Knowles in its '60s-influenced instructional music video.[23] It is the second track of the album, and was the fifth single released in the U.S. "Get Me Bodied" was the album's lowest-charting U.S.-released single, having reached the Billboard Hot 100 below top fifty.[24] "Suga Mama" is set as the third track; its music video features Knowles riding a mechanical bull.[25] The promotional single "Upgrade U" is the album's fourth track. Another collaboration with Jay-Z, the lyrics speaks of luxuries.[26] Knowles acts as Jay-Z for much of his part of the single's music video.[27]

The album's second single "Ring the Alarm" is noted for the use of a siren in its melody. It was called a song that "shows a harder edge to Beyoncé's sound".[6] The single was released on October 3, and became her highest-charting single debut, opening at number twelve on the Billboard Hot 100.[28] "Kitty Kat" is the sixth track of the album; its music video features Knowles with a gigantic cat.[23] "Freakum Dress", the next track, is a crescendo that uses a two-note riff and galloping beats.[29] The song "advises women who have partners with straying eyes to put on sexy dresses and grind on other guys in the club to regain their affections."[26] Knowles made a video for the song to explain what "Freakum Dress" was, using different women on ages, races, and sizes, along with the thirty metallic dresses used in the production.[23]

"Green Light" is the eighth track, and was released outside the U.S. Its use of the "uh-huh huh huh" vocals and brassy stabs are a direct echo of "Crazy in Love".[30] A three day-shoot music video, it is remembered for giving Knowles a blistered foot and muscle spasms because of wearing ballet-pointed heels for an 18-hour filming;[25] Knowles considered it as her toughest video shoot.[27] "Irreplaceable" is the ninth track of the album, and was released as the third single in the U.S. and the second single outside North America. Gaining positive critical reviews, "Irreplaceable" was the most successful single off the album, staying on the Billboard Hot 100 at number one for ten weeks consecutively. The single's music video features the debut performance of her all-female band, Suga Mama.[27] The ballad (and Victoria Beckham cover) "Resentment", which was treated as an "oversung downer",[26] is the album's closing track.

Release and promotion

Knowles singing on stage in a glamorous, low cut gown, hair flying back.
Knowles performing "Flaws and All", a song included on the deluxe edition of B'Day

B'Day was released through Columbia Records in collaboration with Sony Urban Music and Music World Music on September 4, 2006 to coincide with Knowles' 25th birthday.[5] Subsequently, it was released on September 5 in North America.[4]

An expanded double-disc deluxe edition of the album was released on April 3, 2007,[31] seven months from the release of the original version. It was later released on April 23 in the UK.[32] Aside from the original track listing, the new edition features five new songs, including "Beautiful Liar", a duet with Colombian singer Shakira; the single marked Billboard chart history, moving ninety-one positions from number ninety-four to number three on April 7, 2007.[33] "Amor Gitano" or "Gypsy Love" is a flamenco-pop song duet with Mexican singer Alejandro Fernández, a soundtrack for Telemundo's "El Zorro" telenovela,[34] is included in the new version, alongside several Spanish re-recordings. The idea of recording foreign language songs was derived from her group's collaboration with Alejandro Sanz for "Quisiera Ser". Knowles worked with producer Rudy Perez for these recordings.[27]

Simultaneously, B'Day Anthology was released, featuring ten videos, including the director's cut of "Listen" and the extended remix of "Get Me Bodied". Most of the videos are from her up tempo tracks;[27] it is more on retro, colors and black hair styles which Knowles thought would be like her character Deena.[23] The shooting of the videos was done in two weeks.[25] At first, the DVD was available in Wal-Mart,[27] but later released to other markets. Other editions of the second issue in several countries do not include the Spanish songs, instead the ten music videos in the DVD.[35]

Singles

  • "Ring the Alarm" "Ring the Alarm" was released as the second single to mixed reception. The single debuted at number 12 on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming Beyoncé's highest US début of her entire musical career. It reached number 12 on the Hot 100, becoming her first solo single to miss the top 10, and was B'Day's second lowest charting U.S.-released single, after "Get Me Bodied" peaked at number 68. The song was nominated at the 49th Grammy Awards. The single's music video is inspired by the 1992 film Basic Instinct.
  • "Irreplaceable" was released on December 5, 2006 in the United States as the album's third single, and the second single in most international music markets. "Irreplaceable" was a worldwide commercial and critical success, becoming Knowles' second best-selling single in her solo career after "Crazy in Love" and B'Day's most successful release. The single performed well on the US Billboard Hot 100, remaining at the top spot for ten consecutive weeks. Certified multi-platinum, "Irreplaceable" is the US' best-selling single in 2007 and the 25th most successful song of the 2000s, according to the Billboard Hot 100 Songs of the Decade.[36] 'Rolling Stone ranked it number sixty on their list of 100 Best Songs of the 2000s decade.[37]
  • "Beautiful Liar" was the first single released from the deluxe edition. It held the distinction of having the largest upward movement on the US Billboard Hot 100 until in 2008. The track won at the 2007 MTV Video Music Award for Most Earth-Shattering Collaboration. In 2008, the song was awarded an Ivor Novello Awards for Best-Selling British Song. A Spanish and English mixed version of the song was produced called "Bello Embustero".
  • "Get Me Bodied" was released on July 10, 2007. The song reached number sixty-eight on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the album's lowest charting U.S.-released single. The song was positively received by contemporary critics. "Get Me Bodied" was nominated by VH1 Soul VIBE Awards Special for Video of the Year. The single's accompanying music video features visual elements and choreography inspired by The Frug from Bob Fosse's film adaptation of the Broadway musical Sweet Charity; the video features Solange, Rowland and Williams.
Other notable singles
  • "Listen" was released as the lead single from film's soundtrack album on December 5, 2006 in the United States, appeared as a hidden track on international editions of Knowles' second solo studio album, B'Day, and also appeared on the Deluxe Edition of Knowles' second LP. The Spanish version of the song "Oye" was released on the EP "Irreemplazable" and on the second disc of the Spanish Deluxe Edition release of "B'Day". "Listen" was a critical success, and it won Best Original Song at the 2007 Annual Critics' Choice Awards. It was also nominated for the 2007 Academy Award for Best Song.
  • "Green Light" were planned to be released as the next two singles from B'Day, following the lead single "Déjà Vu". Beyoncé aimed the tracks for the international market; but opted for "Ring the Alarm" as the second single, which charted poorly.[38] The single was released in the United Kingdom on July 30, 2007 as the fifth single, following "Beautiful Liar".[39] Along with the release of the single, the remix EP Green Light: Freemasons EP was released on July 27, 2007 as an online digital download.[40] The song received positive reception from critics. Because of heavy radio airplay of the Freemasons remix, as soon as it was available, the song climbed sixty places to number seventeen the following week, and then to number twelve, giving Knowles her eleventh top twenty hit in the UK. "Green Light" became Knowles's highest charting single on downloads alone on the UK Singles Chart without a prominent featured artist.

Tour

In mid-2006, Knowles looked for an all-female band for her 2007 tour, The Beyoncé Experience, to promote the album. She held an audition for keyboard players, bassists, guitarists, horn players, percussionists and drummers around the world.[41] Visiting over ninety venues,[42] Knowles embarked on the tour in Japan on April 10, 2007[27] and concluded it on December 30, 2007 in Las Vegas.

Reception

Commercial performance

B'Day peaked at number one on the Billboard 200, the official album chart in the U.S., on September 23, 2006,[43] becoming the chart's highest debut.[44] The album gave Knowles her second highest charting album since Dangerously in Love, which topped the chart also on its debut. The album racked up 541,000 units sold after a week of release, 224,000 higher than Dangerously in Love's 317,000 sales, but 122,000 lower that her former group's Survivor, earning 663,000 on its start. According to Nielsen SoundScan, a music source provider, B'Day was the chart's best sales number since Tool's 10,000 Days selling 564,000 copies in May of the same year.[43] Simultaneously, B'Day also charted at the number one position on the Billboards's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums tally[43] and later on Billboard Top Internet Albums.[45] The album, however, failed to continue its domination of the top spot after Justin Timberlake's FutureSex/LoveSounds (2006) replaced it the following week. In 2006, the album was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.[46] B'Day became the U.S.' thirty-eighth best-selling album of 2006.[47]

While the album's chart performance eventually began to falter, the release of the deluxe edition helped it break the top ten; it had sold 214,000 copies since its release at the beginning of April.[48] After the first week of the re-release, the album's number sixty-three position surged back to number three,[49] and charted again at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. It sold up to 126,000 scans having its sales increase by 903 percent.[49] On April 16, 2007, Recording Industry Association of America re-certified B'Day as triple platinum adding the sales from the original B'Day album with the De-Luxe Edition B'Day album.[46] After two years on the charts, it was announced that the album was the 170th best-selling album of 2008 in the US.[50]

Internationally, B'Day garnered mostly positive reaction. In the UK, B'Day debuted at number three on September 11, 2007 selling 35,000 copies in its first week.[51] Like the album's performance in Ireland, where it debuted at the same number, it did not reach any higher position and stayed on the chart for thirty-eight weeks. The British Phonographic Industry certified B'Day Platinum for shipping 300,000 units, since 2009 along with the sales for the Deluxe Edition of B'Day the album has sold nearly 502,253 copies in the UK.[52] Across the Oceania, B'Day had the same reception debuting on Australian Albums Chart and New Zealand Albums Chart both at number eight on the same week, September 11, 2006.[44] It stayed at the stop position on two weeks in New Zealand. B'Day remained the charts for twenty and twenty-five weeks respectively.[44] B'Day went Gold in Germany for 100,000 copies sold[53] and in Greece,[54] in Portugal[55] and Romania for 10,000 copies sold.[56]

Critical response

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[17]
Robert Christgau(A-)[57]
Entertainment Weekly(B+)[58]
Los Angeles Times[59]
The New York Times(mixed)[60]
Pitchfork Media(7.2/10)[61]
PopMatters(6/10)[19]
Rolling Stone[15]
Slant Magazine[62]
USA Today[63]

Upon its release, the album received generally positive reviews from most music critics, based on an aggregate score of 70/100 from Metacritic.[64] Bill Lamb of About.com complimented B'Day for exuding the "work of a woman with focus, energy, empathy, and vocal firepower to spare", giving it four and a half stars out of five.[65] Entertainment Weekly's Jody Rosen noted that "the songs [in the album] arrive in huge gusts of rhythm and emotion, with Beyoncé's voice rippling over clattery beats", rating the album B+.[58] Jonah Weiner of Blender magazine approved the album with four stars for "producing up-tempo beats bringing the dance floor never cool down".[21] Billboard magazine's Gail Mitchell wrote that "throughout [the album], she romps with creative abandon, thankfully unafraid of stretching the boundaries lyrically and musically".[66] Sal Cinquemani of Slant Magazine noted that "B'Day is a reminiscent of Knowles' former group at their commercial peak".[62]

However, some critics found its production as a weakness. Roger Friedman of Fox News reviewed the album negatively and stated that "the result of so many cooks in the kitchen ... is that ... Beyoncé serves up a [mix of] ... shrill singing and invariably tuneless songs".[8] Rolling Stone magazine's Brian Hiatt averred that "while the mostly up-tempo disc never lacks for energy, some of the more beat-driven tracks feel harmonically and melodically undercooked, with hooks that don't live up to 'Crazy in Love' or the best Destiny's Child hits".[15] The Boston Globe's Sarah Rodman, however, stated that the production team helped Knowles "focus on edgier, up-tempo tracks that take her sweet soprano to new places".[26] Mike Joseph of PopMatters stated that "the album is solid", but because of its rushed production, he counter-argued that "aside from its relatively short running time, its sound suspiciously under produced".[19] In his consumer guide for MSN Music, critic Robert Christgau gave B'Day an A- rating and wrote favorably of its songs' themes concerning wealth and empowerment, stating "On most of them she's wronged yet still in control because she's got so much money".[57] Giving the album four out of five stars, Andy Kellman of Allmusic stated that Knowles' "hurryness" in the album produced "no songs with the smooth elegance" of "Me, Myself and I" or "Be with You"; he however added, "... there is nothing desperate or weak about this album".[17] The Guardian's Caroline Sullivan wrote favorably of the album's female-oriented themes and stated "Apart from a few pop-R&B space-fillers, there's not much to dislike about B'Day".[67]

The album was nominated for five Grammy Awards, including "Best Contemporary R&B Album", "Best Female R&B Vocal Performance" for "Ring the Alarm", "Best R&B Song" for "Déjà Vu", "Best Rap/Sung Collaboration" for "Déjà Vu", and "Best Remixed Recording, Non-Classical" for "Déjà Vu" (Freemasons club mix - no rap) (remixed by Russell Small and James Wiltshire). B'Day won the award for "Best Contemporary R&B Album" at the 49th Grammy Awards in 2006.[68] The following year, B'Day received two Grammy nominations for Record of the Year for "Irreplaceable" and Best Pop Collaboration for "Beautiful Liar". She also received a Grammy nomination for her work on Dreamgirls.[69]

Controversy

Three weeks after its release,[70] the deluxe edition and the video anthology DVD was temporarily ceased in the retail stores. A lawsuit was filed for breach of contract of using "Still in Love (Kissing You)", a version of British singer Des'ree's original song "Kissing You".[48] Not intended for the album's inclusion, Des'ree's deal also stipulated that the title of the song was not to be altered, and a video was not to be made.[70][71] After the infringement issue, the present version of the re-issue does not include the track.[70]

The artwork of B'Day, including the cover of "Ring the Alarm", fueled controversy after Knowles used alligators during the photo shoot. Knowles revealed that using the animal and taping their mouths shut was her idea. PETA, an animal rights organization which had previous confronted her after she had used furs for her fashion line's clothing design, contacted a biologist who later wrote a letter to her:

As a specialist in reptile biology and welfare, I'm concerned about your posing with a terrified baby alligator for your new album cover. Humans and alligators are not natural bedfellows, and the two should not mix at events such as photo shoots. In my view, doing so is arguably abusive to an animal.[72]

In 2007, Knowles appeared on billboards and newspapers across the United States showing her holding an antiquated cigarette holder. Taken from the back cover of B'Day, the image provoked response from an anti-smoking group, stating that she needed not to add the cigarette holder "to make herself appear more sophisticated".[73]

Track listing

No.TitleMusicLength
1."Déjà Vu" (feat. Jay-Z)B. Knowles, R. Jerkins, D. Thomas, Makeba, K. N. Price, S. Carter3:59
2."Get Me Bodied"B. Knowles, S. Knowles, K. Dean, S. Garrett, Makeba, A. Beyince3:25
3."Suga Mama"B. Knowles, R. Harrison, Makeba, C. Middleton3:24
4."Upgrade U" (feat. Jay-Z)B. Knowles, MK, Makeba, S. Garrett, S. Knowles, A. Beyoncé, S. Carter, W. Clarke, C. Reid4:32
5."Ring the Alarm"B. Knowles, K. Dean, S. Garrett3:23
6."Kitty Kat"B. Knowles, P. Williams, S. Carter, Makeba3:55
7."Freakum Dress"B. Knowles, R. Harrison, Makeba3:20
8."Green Light"B. Knowles, P. Williams, S. Garrett3:29
9."Irreplaceable"S. Smith, B. Knowles, M. S. Eriksen, T. E. Hermansen, E. Lind, A. Bjørklund3:49
10."Resentment"B. Knowles, W. W. Millsap III, C. C. Nelson, C. Mayfield4:40
International bonus tracks
No.TitleMusicLength
11."Back Up"B. Knowles, R. Jerkins3:27
12."Lost Yo Mind" 3:47
13."Creole (Japan bonus track)" 3:53
14."Check on It (feat. Bun B & Slim Thug)
(Japan, Latin America and Europe bonus track)
"
B. Knowles, K. Dean, S. Garrett, A. Beyincé, S. Thomas3:32
15."Encore for the Fans (Japan, Latin America and Europe bonus track)" 10:15
  • Notes
    • "Suga Mama" samples "Searching for Soul" by Jake Wade and the Soul Searchers
    • "Upgrade U" samples "Girls Can't Do What the Guys Do (And Still Be a Lady)" by Betty Wright
    • "Resentment" samples "Think" (Instrumental) by Curtis Mayfield
    • "Encore for the Fans" contains: "Check on It", "Encore for the Fans" (Interlude), "Listen" & "Get Me Bodied" (Extended Mix)

Deluxe Edition

European Editions[74]
No.TitleLength
21."Check on It" (featuring Slim Thug)3:30
22."Amor Gitano" (featuring Alejandro Fernández)3:48
23."Beautiful Liar" (Europe iTunes Bonus Track)3:53
Japanese Editions
No.TitleLength
21."Check on It" (featuring Slim Thug)3:30
22."Creole"3:53
23."World Wide Woman"3:42

Chart history

Chart positions

Chart procession and succession

Preceded by Billboard 200 number-one album
September 17, 2006 – September 23, 2006
Succeeded by

Awards

Award procession and succession
Preceded by Grammy Award for Best Contemporary R&B Album
2007
Succeeded by

Personnel

Notes

  1. ^ a b Patel, Joseph (2004-01-07). "Beyonce Puts Off Second Solo LP To Reunite Destiny's Child". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  2. ^ "Beyoncé Knowles: Biography - Part 2". People. Retrieved 2008-04-01.
  3. ^ Tecson, Brandee J. (2006-01-02). "Beyonce Slimming Down And 'Completely Becoming Deena'". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Reid, Shaheem. "Be All You Can, B." MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05. Cite error: The named reference "Reid" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  5. ^ a b Hope, Clover (2004-05-30). "Beyoncé To Celebrate 'B'Day' In September". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Conniff, Tamara (2004-06-16). "Beyoncé Builds Buzz For 'B-Day'". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  7. ^ a b Moss, Corey (2004-07-12). "Want To Wake Up With Beyonce? Revealing Photo Spread Takes You Inside Her Morning". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-11.
  8. ^ a b c Friedman, Roger (2004-08-17). "First Look: Beyonce's New Album 'B'Day'". Fox News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  9. ^ B'Day deluxe edition (Media notes). Sony Music BMG Entertainment. 2007.
  10. ^ MTV News staff (2006-08-01). "For The Record: Quick News On Beyoncé, Jay-Z, Mel Gibson, DMX, Audioslave, Fantasia, Britney Spears & More". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  11. ^ Smith, Daniel. "Beyonce kicks of Japan promo for sophomore solo album B Day". ACTV. Access Television. Archived from the original on 2008-01-15. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  12. ^ Vineyard, Jennifer (2006-05-31). "Beyonce's Triple Threat: New Album, Film, Fashion Line Before Year's End". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  13. ^ "Beyonce - Biography". Music World Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2007-10-15. Retrieved 2008-02-11.
  14. ^ MTV News Staff (2007-11-02). "The Weekend Fix: Celebrity Birthdays, the latest news, The 'American Gangster' Movie Minute and more". MTV News Canada. CTVglobemedia. Retrieved 2008-01-29.
  15. ^ a b c Hiatt, Brian (2006-09-20). "Beyonce: B'Day". Rollingstone. Retrieved 2008-01-05. Cite error: The named reference "Hiatt" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  16. ^ Reid, Shaheem (2006-08-30). "Beyonce Album Preview: Harder Sound, Aggressive Songs Among B'Day's Gifts". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  17. ^ a b c Kellman, Andy. "Album Review: B'Day". Allmusic. Macrovision Corporation. Retrieved 2008-01-08. Cite error: The named reference "Kellman" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  18. ^ a b Haynes, Eb (2006-09-20). "Album Review: B'Day". Allhiphop. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  19. ^ a b c Joseph, Mike (2006-09-11). "Beyoncé: B-Day". Popmatters. Retrieved 2008-01-05. Cite error: The named reference "Joseph" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  20. ^ a b Lamb, Bill. "Beyonce featuring Jay-Z - Déjà vu". About. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  21. ^ a b Weiner, Jonah (2006-09-04). "Beyoncé: B-Day". Blender. Dennis Digital, Inc. Retrieved 2008-01-05.
  22. ^ Encore for the Fans. Sony Music BMG Entertainment. 2006. {{cite AV media}}: |access-date= requires |url= (help)
  23. ^ a b c d Vineyard, Jennifer. "Beyonce: Behind The B'Day Videos 2". MTV News. Retrieved 2008-01-06. Cite error: The named reference "Jennifer2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
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