Schizophrenic (JC Chasez album)
Schizophrenic is the debut solo studio album by American recording artist JC Chasez. It was released on February 24, 2004. The album spanned various musical genres, including New Wave, electronica, rock, disco, soul and reggae. Chasez served as a primary producer, co-writing fifteen of the album’s tracks. Two singles were released from the album: "Some Girls (Dance with Women)" and "All Day Long I Dream About Sex".
Schizophrenic | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | February 24, 2004 (U.S.) | |||
Recorded | 2002-2003 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 76:01 | |||
Label | Jive/Zomba | |||
Producer |
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JC Chasez chronology | ||||
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Singles from Schizophrenic | ||||
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Though the album had minimal promotion at its time of release and was not met with large commercial success, it has since been retroactively praised by critics for its musical breadth, vocals, production, and electropop sound.[1][2]
Background
After his group NSYNC went on hiatus after the Celebrity tour in 2002, Chasez teamed up with producer Dallas Austin to record the song "Blowin' Me Up (With Her Love)" for the soundtrack to the film Drumline. Following the song's success as a single, Chasez began working on a record that he intended to be different from NSYNC's music.[3] Chasez had not intended on embarking on a solo career until Austin convinced him to make an album. Of Austin’s encouragement, Chasez said, "He's like, 'You've got too much to say. You know, there's no reason why you shouldn't. You're writing songs anyway.’"[4] Chasez said the album title is derived "'from [its] different styles and attitudes that are on this album. It’s gritty, it's noisy, and it is definitely not like anything I've done before.”[5] Austin described the album as a throwback "to George Michael and Prince and that '80s era, where even though you had up-tempos, they still had songs to them, they had a lot of attitude.'”[6][4] Aside from Chasez and Austin, the album features productions from Robb Boldt and Riprock 'n' Alex G, the latter having worked with Chasez on No Strings Attached and Celebrity. Basement Jaxx wrote and produced the song “Shake It” after Chasez lent his vocals to the duo’s single "Plug It In."[7]
Release and promotion
The release of Schizophrenic was delayed twice, with an originally planned release date in the summer of 2003 bumped to that fall, and again bumped to January in the following year.[8] When the album was released on February 24, 2004, promotion was further affected by the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show controversy which had occurred earlier that month. Chasez was scheduled to perform "Some Girls (Dance with Women)" at the Pro Bowl in Hawaii a week after the Super Bowl, but due to the NFL’s crackdown on what they perceived to be indecent content in the song, organizers demanded Chasez sing “Blowin’ Me Up (With Her Love)” instead. Chasez was again asked to make changes to the song, particularly the line: “She was leaning on me/ Getting horny/ Maybe we'll get naughty”. Ultimately, Chasez’s Pro Bowl appearance was nixed.[2][9][10] In addition, radio stations declined to play the single “All Day Long I Dream About Sex" for fear of FCC fines, preventing the song and music video from gaining exposure.[11]
To promote Schizophrenic, Chasez began a mini club tour in December of 2003, earning positive reviews from The New York Times[12] and San Francisco Chronicle.[13] Marketing for the album fared better in the U.K.,[14][15][16][17] where Chasez was an opening act on several dates for Britney Spears' Onyx Hotel tour. Prior to and after his opening dates for Spears, Chasez toured venues in the U.S accompanied by a five-piece band. In a review of his show at New York's Roseland Ballroom, Chasez was described as “a fine singer who performed every song during the brief but explosive 75-minute set. Still, as good as his voice was (especially on the ballad 'Dear Goodbye'), his dancing stole the show.”[18]
Devon Powers of PopMatters noted that "Chasez's years of performing multiple nights to crowds ten times as large were put to good use. Complete with dancers, costume changes, lights, and props, Chasez crossed the line from sheer musician to pure entertainer...If the music business is a circus, Chasez set out to produce The Greatest Show on Earth.”[19] Powers also praised his vocal talents: "His voice is, without question, a miracle: elastic and tough, it can move from curdling to coddling in an instant, pushing the limits of what one would think is humanely possible.”[19]
Jon Pareles (New York Times) commented "Mr. Chasez is most retro in his rock; like a promising apprentice, he directly mimicked Robert Plant and Prince (singing Prince's 'Let's Go Crazy'), and whipped up a fervor to rival early Sting in his Police imitation, 'Everything You Want.’"[12] Patrick Berkery (The Philadelphia Inquirer) wrote, "Chasez was a bumping and grinding, locking and popping dancing machine as he sang carnally minded jams from his debut solo outing...in a voice that alternated between achy tenor and fluttery falsetto."[20]
In addition to touring, Chasez appeared and performed on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, On Air with Ryan Seacrest, and The Ellen DeGeneres Show.[21] He performed the ballad “Build My World” at the Miss Teen USA pageant.
The title and cover art for Schizophrenic attracted criticism from mental health groups for misappropriating schizophrenia, the brain disorder. Chasez issued an apology, clarifying that his album title and cover art was not in reference to the clinical definition of the term, but to the album’s varied musical styles.[22]
Critical reception
Aggregate scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 57/100[23] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Entertainment Weekly | B-[25] |
Rolling Stone | |
Slant Magazine | |
Stylus Magazine | D+[28] |
The Independent |
Upon release, Schizophrenic garnered mixed to positive reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 57 based on 16 reviews.[30] Critics lauded the album for its adventurous range of musical styles. James Hunter of Rolling Stone admired JC for going through different genres throughout the album, concluding with "No doubt about it, Schizophrenic is a lot. It's also cool."[26] Of the album’s musical range, Catherine Woolf wrote, "House, electroclash, hip-hop, funk, and even a crunked-out variation on that omnipresent Diwali riddim...proliferate on this record, and in Chasez’s house, all the various genres can play nice together."[31] P.E. Nelson called the album "an immensely listenable collection of well-crafted pop tunes” that shows Chasez wears “his influences on his sleeve,"[32] and Aidin Vaziri of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote Schizophrenic “[proves] that dance music is fun and technological and dirty."[33]
In another positive review of the album, Joan Anderman of The Boston Globe likened the first single “Some Girls (Dance with Women)” to "a jungly clutch of rhythms iced with an itchy-sweet melody, part conga line, part pop tune. It's sexy and silly and funky in a George Michael sort of way.”[34] Critic William Jefferson praised the “fast and furious wordplay” of “Some Girls” as well as its "tightly woven harmonies as alluring as silk and satin.”[35] Doug Rule of Metro Weekly wrote, "Chasez exudes confidence in creating pop music -- and especially playful pop music of a hot-blooded, dance orientation,” and said the single “All Day Long I Dream About Sex” has a "fascinating acoustic meets electronica sound and an extended instrumental bridge that glistens with updated '80s synth-pop.”[36]
Critics also had praise for the album’s ballads. “The ballads…have themes of heartache and longing. 'Dear Goodbye' is especially powerful, with its simple melody and the focus on the words of the song, ‘a love defeated,'”[37] wrote Shani Alston in The Pitt News. Critics also commended Chasez’s vocal talents as well as the album’s production.[31] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic praised the producers for taking risks with different genres, concluding with "Chasez may not be able to eclipse Timberlake's star, but in his favor, he does have an album that on a strictly musical level tries harder and achieves more than Justified ".[24] Tom Moon of The Philadelphia Inquirer noted how Chasez "avoided the just-add-water hooks of teen pop in favor of more elaborate chord sequences and compositional schemes.”[38]
Other critics were divided about the album’s refusal to stick to one uniform sound, as well as the album’s length.[39][36][24] Neil Drumming of Entertainment Weekly noticed the '80s influenced production by Riprock and Alex G. but found Chasez's attempt at a new sound to be "a tad misguided."[25] Much attention was given to the album’s more overtly sexual lyrics, which some critics saw as distracting and as an excessive attempt by Chasez to shed his boy band image.[24] Others saw these lyrics as tongue-in-cheek humor, noting how Chasez knowingly “[pokes] fun at himself in the comical 'One Night Stand.’"[40] Many reviews were also focused on comparing Schizophrenic to Timberlake’s Justified, which had debuted about a year prior to Chasez’s album.
In more recent reviews, critics have noted that Schizophrenic was ahead of its time in its "dance-pop and electronic-driven style.”[41] A lack of support from Jive Records,[42] as well as bad timing, have been seen as factors in preventing Schizophrenic from gaining wider appreciation during its release.[2] In a piece for Shondaland.com discussing Chasez’s work on Schizophrenic, writer Britt Julious wrote:
"Schizophrenic" showed the sort of promise rarely seen from post-pop stardom musicians. From the smart wordplay of "Some Girls (Dance With Women)" to the progressive, percussion-heavy production of "Blowing Me Up (With Her Love)," "Schizophrenic" was an original album from an artist’s artist. Chasez’s appreciation for a variety of different genres of music was on full display in the album’s production. In the first three tracks alone, Chasez bounces between sensual R&B, comforting pop-rock, and progressive rock. It didn’t sound like any other pop released in its era.[1]
Commercial performance
The album peaked at number seventeen on the Billboard 200.[43] It reportedly sold 121,000 copies in total.[44]
Track listing
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Some Girls (Dance with Women)" | JC Chasez, Brad Daymond, Alex Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 4:32 |
2. | "She Got Me" | Gregg Arreguin, Robb Boldt, Chasez | Boldt, Chasez | 3:27 |
3. | "100 Ways" | Boldt, Chasez, Eric Schermerhorn | Boldt, Chasez | 4:14 |
4. | "Mercy" | Chasez, Daymond, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 4:24 |
5. | "Build My World" | Boldt, Chasez, London Jones, Tony Lucca, Stephan Moccio | Boldt, Chasez | 4:15 |
6. | "Something Special" | Arreguin, Boldt, Chasez | Boldt, Chasez | 3:52 |
7. | "If You Were My Girl" | Chasez, Daymond, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 5:24 |
8. | "Shake It" | Felix Buxton, Billy Nicholas, Simon Ratcliffe | Basement Jaxx | 4:33 |
9. | "All Day Long I Dream About Sex" | Chasez, Daymond, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 6:04 |
10. | "One Night Stand" | Pete Bellotte, Chasez, Daymond, Greggs, Giorgio Moroder, Donna Summer | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 3:23 |
11. | "Come To Me" | Boldt, Chasez, Corey Hart, D. Stinson | Boldt, Chasez | 5:58 |
12. | "Dear Goodbye" | Arreguin, Boldt, David J. Carpenter, Chasez | Boldt, Chasez | 5:01 |
13. | "Everything You Want" | Chasez, Daymond, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 4:29 |
14. | "Lose Myself" | Boldt, Chasez, Moccio | Boldt, Chasez | 4:58 |
15. | "Right Here (By Your Side)" | Chasez, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 2:43 |
16. | "Blowin' Me Up (With Her Love)" (bonus track) | Dallas Austin, Chasez | Austin, Chasez | 4:50 |
17. | "Some Girls (Dance With Women)" (featuring Dirt McGirt) (bonus track)) | Chasez, Daymond, Greggs | Chasez, Riprock 'n' Alex G | 3:54 |
Notes:
- "One Night Stand" contains a sample of Donna Summer's 1977 hit "I Feel Love".
- "Come To Me" contains a sample of Corey Hart's 1983 hit "Sunglasses at Night".
Charts
Chart (2004) | Peak position |
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UK Albums (OCC)[45] | 46 |
US Billboard 200[46] | 17 |
References
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