Shontelligence

Shontelligence
Studio album by Shontelle
Released November 18, 2008 (2008-11-18)
March 10, 2009 (2009-03-10) (re-release)
Recorded 2006 — 2008
Genre R&B, reggae, reggae fusion, hip hop
Length 40:23
Label SRC Records/Motown Records
Producer Dwayne "Supa Dups" Chin-Quee, Classic Soul Productions, Andrew Frapton, Fredo, The Heavyweights, The Jam, Carl Sturken and Evan Rogers, Stargate, Wayne Wilkins
Shontelle chronology
Shontelligence
(2008)
No Gravity
(2010)
Singles from Shontelligence
  1. "T-Shirt"
    Released: July 15, 2008
  2. "Stuck with Each Other"
    Released: February 10, 2009
  3. "Battle Cry"
    Released: June 9, 2009

Shontelligence[1] is the debut studio album of Barbadian R&B singer Shontelle. It was released on November 18, 2008.[2] However, due to low sales, the album was re-released, featuring the new single "Stuck With Each Other", on March 10, 2009.

Background

Speaking to noted UK R&B writer Pete Lewis of the award-winning 'Blues & Soul' in February 2009, Shontelle described how the album title first came about: "We were actually hanging out in the studio, kinda waiting for things to bubble up - you know, the guys there tend to get a bit silly sometimes with their sense of humour. So one guy somehow comes up with this bright idea - 'Hey Shontelle! Let's play a word-game with your name today! Whoever can come up with the most words using your name gets free lunch!'! So they're like 'Shontel-evator', 'Shontel-evision', 'Shontel-icopter'... Then my engineer, Al, suddenly turns round and says 'Yeah, that's some real Shontelligence there!'... And straightaway everyone in the studio turned around at the same time, and were like 'That has to be your album title!'!"[3]

Reception

Commercial

The album was released on November 18, 2008 and reportedly sold 1,000 records in its first day of release. The album sold 4,850 records in its first week, and debuted at #115 on the Billboard 200. The album went on to sell 25,000 records by February, 2009. Due to low sales SRC chose to re-release the album only 4 months later on March 10, 2009. The re-release did not sell very well either. Incorporating sales original version and the re-issue of the album. As of July 2009, the record has sold 50,000 copies in the US and 10,000 copies in the UK.

Critical

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
ARTISTdirect[4]
The Guardian[5]
LiveDaily[6]
The New York Times(negative)[7]

The album has received generally mixed reviews from music critics.

Ben Ratliffe of The New York Times gave the album a mixed review stating that:

Any pop singer who's been through that mill, willingly or not, has something to tell, but it feels as if Shontelle's individuality is being squelched. The first two tracks, T-Shirt and Battle Cry, both produced by Wayne Wilkins, are the singles, and they stand apart from the rest of the album. They're rampagingly sweet R&B songs, one about the solidarity of lust, one about the solidarity of friendship. After that -- largely in songs produced by Mr. Sturken and Mr. Rogers -- things go sharply downhill. There are enough acoustic guitar and reggae grooves to distinguish Shontelligence from most R&B records, but it hardly matters; this is a record in which a song called Ghetto Lullabye, inevitably rhymes its title with the line hush now, shorty, don't you cry. A potential identity for Shontelle almost rises up in Plastic People, about political conformity, but it's for naught: redolent of Des'ree's You Gotta Be, the song is already drowning in sonic conformity.[7]

Alex Macpherson of The Guardian gave the album a mixed 3/5 stars stated that:

The album's lead single was horrible and she preferred Rihanna to Shontelle, and labeled her a "wannabe hitmaker", citing "the bland lyrics" of "T-Shirt" being comparable to any R&B song.[8] However, The Guardian's review of the album was much more positive, citing the artist's "thoughtful songwriting and an understated vocal presence," and comparing her to Ne-Yo.[5]

David Balls of Digital Spy gave the album a mixed 3/5 stars:

Crafted by a team of established hitmakers including Stargate and Evan Rogers and Carl Sturken, Shontelligence certainly has the potential to shift units in an age of disposable R&B. But considering Shontelle's high-achieving past, it's disappointing that the handful of shining moments are dimmed by a barrage of mediocrity. Still, with her strong ambition and clear determination to succeed, you wouldn't bet against her best being yet to come.

Singles

Other Notable Songs

Track listing

Shontelligence – Standard version
No. TitleWriter(s) Length
1. "T-Shirt"  Andrew Frampton, Wayne Wilkins, Savan Kotecha 3:54
2. "Battle Cry"  Jamal Jones, Jack Kugell, Wilkins, Jason Pennock, Jordan Omley 3:32
3. "Superwoman"  Amanda Ghost, Tor Erik Hermansen, Mikkel S. Eriksen, Ian Dench 4:19
4. "Cold Cold Summer"  Shontelle Layne, Carl Sturken, Evan Rogers 3:44
5. "Roll It"  Layne, Sheldon Benjamin 3:31
6. "Life Is Not An Easy Road"  Layne, Dwayne Chin Quee, Mitchum Chin 3:44
7. "Focus Pon Me"  Layne, Eliseus Joseph 3:06
8. "Plastic People"  Layne, Sturken, Rogers 3:59
9. "I Crave You"  Layne, Sturken, Rogers 3:57
10. "Ghetto Lullabye"  Frederik Odesjo, Layne, Rogers, Sturken 3:06
11. "Flesh And Bone"  Layne, Sturken, Rogers 3:31

Charts

Chart Peak
position
UK Albums (OCC) 147
US Billboard 200 115
US Billboard Top R&B Hip/Hop Albums 24

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/4/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.