So Much Better

So Much Better
Studio album by Carl Thomas
Released Japan May 30, 2007
United States June 5, 2007
Recorded 2006-2007
Unsung Studios
Los Angeles, California
Thom Tunes Studios
Chicago, Illinois
Flyte Tyme Studios
Santa Monica, California
Genre R&B; Soul
Length 68:22
Label Bungalo Records
Producer Mike City, A. Jermaine Mobley, Hakim Young, Jimmy Jam & Terry Lewis, Bryan-Michael Cox, James "Big Jim" Wright
Carl Thomas chronology
Let's Talk About It
(2004)
So Much Better
(2007)
Conquer
(2011)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
About.com[1]

So Much Better is the third album by Carl Thomas and debut release on a new record label, Bungalo Records. It was released in the United States on June 5, 2007. The label has major distribution by Universal.

The album debuted at number 25 on the U.S. Billboard 200, selling about 28,000 copies in its first week.[2] As of July 11, 2007, it has sold 58,037 copies in the US. The album cover was photographed by former rapper D-Nice while the A&R overseeing the project were Hakim Green and Vincent "Tuffy" Morgan, members of the mid-90's hip hop group Channel Live.

Track listing

So Much BetterStandard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."If I Could" (Intro)
 
2."Another You"  FlowersCity 
3."2 Pieces"  FlowersCity 
4."Thought You Should Know" (featuring Lalah Hathaway)
  • Mobley
  • Young
 
5."Somethin' Bout You"  FlowersCity 
6."If That Ain't Love"  FlowersCity 
7."Late Night Rendezvous"  FlowersCity 
8."Get You Back" (Interlude)
  • Thomas
  • Flowers
City 
9."So Much Better"  FlowersCity 
10."Oh No (You Can't Be Serious)"  
  • Thomas
  • Taylor
  • Mobley
  • Young
  • Mobley
  • Young
 
11."Can't Get Over" (featuring Dave Hollister)FlowersCity 
12."How Can We"  FlowersCity 
13."If You Ever"  
  • Cox
 
14."Say I Do"  
  • Thomas
  • Taylor
  • Mobley
  • Young
  • Mobley
  • Young
 
15."I Miss You" (Interlude)FlowersCity 
16."Home"   
17."Outro" (Remix) (featuring E-40)
  • Flowers
  • City
 
18."Oh No (You Can't Be Serious)" (Remix) (featuring Baby Cham)
  • City
 
Notes and sample credits

^[A] denotes co-producer

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2007) Peak
position
US Billboard 200[3] 25
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[4] 2

Personnel

  • Drum Programming and Keyboards: Mike City, A. Jermaine Mobley, Jimmy Jam, James "Big Jim" Wright
  • Drums: Isaiah "IZ" Avila
  • Guitar: Natural, Erik Walls, Donald "Pup Dawg"
  • Background vocals: Mike City, Lalah Hathaway, Brandy, Claude Kelly, Gordon Chambers, Di Reed
  • Recording and mixing engineers: Francis "Franchise" Graham, Matt Marrin, Titanic Tracks, Troy Taylor, Jeff Jones, Sam Waters, Vincent "Tuffy" Morgan

  • Executive producer: Carl Thomas, Mike City, Jheryl Busby
  • Mastering: Gene Grimaldi
  • A&R direction: Hakim Green, Vincent "Tuffy" Morgan
  • Photography: Derrick "D-Nice" Jones, Parrish Lewis
  • Art direction & design: Rab Butler

References

  1. About.com review
  2. Katie Hasty, "T-Pain Soars To No. 1 Ahead Of Rihanna, McCartney", Billboard.com, June 13, 2007.
  3. "Carl Thomas – Chart history" Billboard 200 for Carl Thomas. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
  4. "Carl Thomas – Chart history" Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums for Carl Thomas. Retrieved December 29, 2015.
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