Things Happen for a Reason

Things Happen for a Reason is the debut studio album by Australian singer Che'Nelle. It was first released on 22 August 2007, Japan via EMI Music Japan. An international release followed on 5 September 2007 by Capitol Records. It was her first commercial release after signing with the Capitol Music Group CEO Jason Flom. Sir Charles Dixon served as the album's executive producer, after he discovered Che'Nelle's music online and helped to secure her record deal. The album features productions from James Poyser, Oak Felder, Sean Garrett, Kara DioGuardi and Rich Harrison and The Lab Ratz. Che'Nelle either wrote or co-wrote the entire album. The album was largely mixed by Andrew Dawson. Three songs featured on "Things Happen for a Reason" sample songs performed by other artists.

Things Happen for a Reason
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 22, 2007
Recorded2007
GenreR&B, dancehall, reggae fusion, hip hop
LabelCapitol
Singles from Things Happen for a Reason
  1. "I Fell in Love with the DJ"
    Released: 2007
  2. "Hurry Up"
    Released: 2008
  3. "First Love"
    Released: 2008
Alternative covers
Japan Edition Cover
Alternative cover
Special Edition Cover

"I Fell in Love with the DJ" was released as the first single from the album. It charts in various European countries including France. The second single from "Things Happen for a Reason" is "Hurry Up" and rapper Tinchy Stryder was featured on the song for its release in the United Kingdom. A special edition of the album was released in Japan one year after its original release and also features a new song, "First Love", which served as the final single from the project. It also contains remixes of her debut single. The album charted highest in Japan on the Billboard and Oricon album charts. The album was certified gold by RIAJ, having sold in excess of 100,000 copies in Japan by June 2008.

Background and production

Che'Nelle recorded various demos which were uploaded online via the social networking website MySpace and these were shared across music forums.[1] The artist's work then came to the attention of record producers.[2] It was record promoter Sir Charles Dixon who originally signed Che'Nelle to his production company, SCIP records in 2005.[3] Dixon later contacted Steve Tramposch who worked at Virgin records and he arranged a meeting with his CEO Jason Flom. In February 2006, Flom signed Che'Nelle and the album was put into production.[3] In addition Dixon helped secure a Japanese release of the album by the record label EMI Music Japan.[3]

As Che'Nelle wrote many of the lyrics featured on the album she gained much creative control. She told Aiko Ishikawa of Tower Records that she wanted to create cheeky lyrics, that would cheer up her female audience and also surprise her male listeners.[4] Though various producers contributed to the album, Che'Nelle wanted to create a distinct and unique sound to identify her with. She told Ishikawa that she envisioned people saying "Oh, that's a Che'Nelle song" upon hearing her music.[4] At the time, Dixon said that Che'Nelle was able to adapt to any song given to her during production. He added that it made her a "universal artist".[5] The song "Mantaker" samples the 1978 song "Holy Ghost" performed by The Bar-Kays.[6] "I Fell In Love With the DJ" samples "Reggae Bump Bump" recorded by American singer R. Kelly in 2005.[6] The Blues Magoos' song "Can't Get Enough of You" was sampled in the song titled "Summer Jam".[6]

Che'Nelle either wrote or co-wrote each song on "Things Happen for a Reason".[6] It also features writing and production from Derek Brin, Oak Felder, James Poyser, Sean Garrett, Kara DioGuardi, Rich Harrison, Dwayne Lindsey and The Lab Ratz.[6] The songs featured on the album were recorded at various studio locations in the US. Some were recorded at Sony Studios in New York City while others at "House of Che'Nelle" at Edgewater, New Jersey. Those written and produced by Garrett and Felder were carried out at Soapbox Studios and Silent Studios based in Atlanta.[6] Che'Nelle also recorded the song "Pops Up" with Rich Harrison. The track was originally recorded by Janet Jackson but was not included on the album.[7] Sir Charles Dixon served as the album's executive producer and is credited as such on the album liner notes.[8]

Promotion

The album was first released in Japan on 20 August 2007 and it peaked at number twelve on the Japan Oricon album chart and remained in the top 100 for sixteen weeks.[9] It peaked at number six on the album chart compiled by Billboard.[10] A special addition of the album featuring remixes and a new song was released on 20 August 2008, which entered the Oricon album chart at number ninety-five and spent four weeks on the chart.[11] The album track "Teach Me How To Dance" was featured in the 2006 film Take the Lead.[12] The track was also featured on the soundtrack for the 2008 movie Make It Happen.[13] In June 2008, the album had sold more than 100,000 copies in Japan and was certified gold by RIAJ.[14]

"I Fell in Love with the DJ" was released as the first single from the album.[15] It was remixed to feature the Jamaican rapper Cham ahead of its release. It peaked at number thirty on the French SNEP chart.[15] Che'Nelle embarked on a US radio tour and visited forty states to promote the single.[16] When the tour came to an end she was informed that the song was not performing well on US radio. Che'Nelle was upset but decided to refocus her attention on the release of "Things Happen for a Reason" in Japan and Europe.[16] The song began to rise in popularity in Japan and she traveled to the country to promote it further. The singer has credited these events for helping her to launch a long-standing career in the country.[16]

"Hurry Up" was the second single from the album. In the UK an official remix was recorded featuring Tinchy Stryder and was sent to national Radio in December 2007.[17]

"First Love" was released as the album's third and final single in Japan. The song only appeared on the album special edition re-release of "Things Happen for a Reason".[18] It was later included on her on her sophomore album titled "Feel Good", alongside an official remix of the song featuring Lecca.[19] The latter charted at number fifty-one in Japan.

Critical reception

Leslie Wilson from Gulf News said that Che'Nelle followed a successful "formula" used by artists such as Beyonce and Christina Aguilera, in which their albums have "attitude".[15] She opined that "there are several songs which have hit written all over them but not many really hit home."[15] She singled out the songs "Club Jumpin'", "Teach Me How to Dance" and "Hurry Up" as potential "summer hits", but felt their "near-identical beat" became repetitive. She observed some "first-rate beats and catchy hooks" but concluded that "Things Happen for a Reason" is a "faceless and at times lacks personality."[15] A reviewer for the Independent Online gave the album a one star rating.[20] They branded it as "excruciating listening" and difficult to define its genre. They accused her of impersonating Shabba Ranks and were shocked that Capitol records even released it.[20] They praised Che'Nelle's vocals on the songs "Right Back" and "Mantaker" but believed she failed to resuscitate ragga music.[20]

Tomoe Sato from Tower Records described it as a collection of colorful tracks "refeshing" dance hall, reggae and reggaeton "flavors". They also praised Che'Nelle's vocal skill on the album.[21] Melody L. Goh from the Malay news outlet The Star said that the album is a formation of "14 dancehall-inspired tracks."[12] Angie Romero from Vibe praised Che'Nelle's work. She opined that "I Fell In Love With the DJ" is a "soca-licious" track and "2nd Nature" has "soft spoken inflections" that are reminiscent of Aaliyah's work.[5] A writer from the Bajan Reporter branded the album as a "satisfying combination of compulsive rhythmic music and soul-deep, intimate ballads." They added it gave her "major new singer-songwriter" status.[22]

Track listing

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Things Happen for a Reason.[6]

No.TitleWriter(s)ProducersLength
1."I Fell in Love with the DJ"3:28
2."Club Jumpin'"
  • Brin
3:49
3."Teach Me How to Dance"
  • Lim
  • Shawn Campbell
  • Marshall Leathers
  • The Arkitects
3:28
4."Hurry Up"
  • Garrett
  • Felder
3:08
5."Right Back"
  • Poyser
  • DioGuardi
  • Bey
4:05
6."Mantaker"
  • Lim
  • Eric Tommy
  • Cornelius Church
  • Kairi Gwinn
  • James Banks
  • Eddie Marion
  • Henderson Thigpen
  • The Lab Ratz
  • Tommy
3:46
7."When We Will Meet Again"
  • Lim
  • Chris Robinson
  • Robinson
4:26
8."Lookin'"
  • Garrett
  • Felder
  • Garrett
  • Felder
3:07
9."Stick With Me"
  • Lim
  • Bell
  • Bell
3:47
10."Summer Jam"
  • Lim
  • Charles Dixon
  • Jens Lomholt
  • P. Jones
  • Eric Kaz
  • The Copenhaniacs
3:22
11."My Pledge"
  • Lim
  • Robinson
  • Robinson
4:48
12."2nd Nature"
  • Lim
  • Rahmat Laver
  • Rami Barz
4:26
13."I Can't Make You Love Me - Interlude"
  • Lim
  • Lim
1:06
14."I Fell in Love with the DJ (Remix)" (featuring Cham)
  • Brin
4:00
15."Outro / Sprung On My Booty Call"
  • Lim
  • Dwayne Lindsey
  • Lim
  • Lindsey
4:30
Japan Edition[23]
No.TitleWriter(s)ProducersLength
15."I Guess"
  • Lim
  • Bell
  • Bell
3:11
16."Certain Things"
  • Lim
  • Nick Gale
  • Gale
5:05
Japan Special Edition[8]
No.TitleWriter(s)ProducersLength
1."First Love"
  • Lim
  • Robinson
  • Robinson
4:22
18."I Fell in Love with the DJ" (Live with DJ Kaori)
  • Lim
  • Kelly
  • O'Neil
  • Lim
  • Bell
3:28
19."I Fell in Love with the DJ" (WAWA Vocal Mix)
  • Lim
  • Kelly
  • O'Neil
  • Lim
  • Bell
  • WAWA
3:28

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Things Happen for a Reason.[6]

  • Cham – featured artist, writer
  • James Banks – writer
  • Marcus Bell – writer, producer
  • Zukhan Bey – writer, producer
  • Derek Brin – writer
  • Shawn Campbell – writer
  • Esteban Carvallo - guitar
  • Che'Nelle – writer, producer, primary artist
  • Cornelius Church – writer, producer
  • Andrew Dawson – mixing
  • Kara DioGuardi – writer, producer
  • Charles Dixon – executive producer, writer
  • Bill Esses - mixing
  • Warren Felder – writer, producer
  • Sean Garrett – writer, producer
  • Kairi Gwinn – writer, producer
  • P. Jones – writer
  • Eric Kaz – writer
  • Dave Kelly – writer, additional recording
  • R. Kelly – writer
  • Rahmat Laver – writer
  • Marshall Leathers – writer
  • Dwayne "Whateva" Lindsay – writer
  • Jens Lomholt – writer
  • Eddie Marion – writer
  • Vernon J Mungo – recording
  • Bryan O'Neil – writer
  • James Poyser – writer, producer
  • Chris Robinson – writer, producer
  • Phil Tan – mixing
  • The Arkitects – producer
  • Henderson Thigpen – writer
  • Eric Tommy – writer, producer

Chart positions

Chart Peak
position
French Albums (SNEP)[24] 174
Japanese Albums (Billboard)[10] 6
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[25] 12

Sales and Certifications

Chart Amount
RIAJ physical shipping certification[14] Gold (100,000+)

Release history

Country Date Format
Japan 20 August 2007[9] CD
Australia 5 September 2007[26] Digital download
US
US 5 September 2007[27] CD
Australia October 2007[28]
Japan 20 August 2008[11] CD, Special Edition
gollark: ^
gollark: Yes, and the rest is overly verbose term calls for mostly no reason.
gollark: And the code was copy-pasted from a forum post I linked them to on SC.
gollark: What is hard to understand about that?
gollark: Indentation. Or else.

References

  1. I Fell In Love With the DJ (Liner Notes [CD]). Che'Nelle. Capitol. 2007. 5099951341220.CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. Em, Kitty (13 May 2015). "6 things you should know about J-pop star Che'Nelle". Sbs.com.au. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  3. "Sir Charles Dixon". WBLS. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  4. Ishikawa, Aiko (6 September 2007). "Che'Nelle". Tower Records (in Japanese). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  5. Romero, Angie (June 2006). "Next". Vibe. p. 112. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  6. Things Happen for a Reason (Liner Notes [CD]). Che'Nelle. Capitol. 2007. 5099950377329.CS1 maint: others (link)
  7. "(Aka Cheryline Lim) Che'Nelle : Bio". Che'Nelle Biography. 2007. Retrieved 7 March 2014.
  8. Things Happen for a Reason -Special Edition- (Liner Notes [CD]). Che'Nelle. Capitol. 2008. TOCP-66818.CS1 maint: others (link)
  9. "Che'Nelle". Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  10. "Sep 15 2007 Hits of the World". Billboard. 15 September 2007. p. 112. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  11. "シェネル・スペシャル・エディション" [Che'Nelle Special Edition]. Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  12. L. Goh, Melody (6 September 2007). "All clicked up". The Star. (Asia News Network). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  13. "Make It Happen 2008 Soundtrack". theost.com. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  14. "Statistics". RIAJ (in Japanese). June 2008. Retrieved 31 July 2018.
  15. Wilson, Leslie (26 January 2008). "Reasonable attempt". Gulf News. (Al Nisr Publishing). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  16. Espiritu, Camille (23 November 2017). "Interview: Che'Nelle". theyoungfolks.com. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  17. "BBC - 1Xtra - Mistajam". BBC Online. 12 December 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  18. "First Love". Oricon (in Japanese). Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  19. Feel Good (Liner Notes [CD]). Che'Nelle. EMI Music Japan. 2010. TOCP-66928.CS1 maint: others (link)
  20. "Things Happen For A Reason - Che' Nelle". Independent Online. (Independent News & Media). 5 March 2008. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  21. "Things Happen for a Reason". Tower Records. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  22. Bourne, Air (13 February 2010). "Malaysian-born singer Che'Nelle is back with her second disk, "Feel Good"". The Bajan Reporter. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  23. "Things Happen for a Reason". Amazon.com. 3 September 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  24. "Les charts français". lescharts.com. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  25. "Weekly Album Ranking September 10, 2007". Oricon (in Japanese). 10 September 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  26. "Things Happen For a Reason by Che'Nelle". iTunes. 5 September 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  27. "Che'Nelle: Debut Album Things Happen For A Reason". chenelle-world.com. 3 June 2007. Archived from the original on 3 June 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  28. "New Australasian Releases". ARIA. October 2007. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
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