Urban Rapsody
Urban Rapsody is an album released by American funk singer Rick James.[5][6] It was released through Mercury Records and Private-I Records in 1997, and was the last one released before his death. The album combines rap and funk.
Urban Rapsody | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | October 14, 1997 | |||
Genre | Funk rap | |||
Length | 72:28 | |||
Label | Private-I, Mercury[1] | |||
Producer | Rick James, Daniel LeMelle | |||
Rick James chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | |
Entertainment Weekly | B-[4] |
Urban Rapsody received a Parental Advisory sticker, James's only album with one. It was his first release since 1988's Wonderful, due to substance abuse problems and an extended period of incarceration.
Critical reception
The New Rolling Stone Album Guide gave the album 1.5 stars (out of 5), writing that it is a "cannily conservative attempt to recapture the R&B portion of his audience, but it lacks the fire of his early hits."[8]
Track listing
All tracks composed by Rick James, except where indicated.
- "Urban Rapsody" (James, LeMelle, Rappin' 4-Tay)
- "West Coast Thing" (James, Shepherd)
- "Somebody's Watching You" (James, Shepherd)
- "Back in You Again"
- "Turn It Out"
- "Good Ol' Days"
- "Player's Way" (James, Snoop Dogg, Shepherd)
- "Never Say You Love Me"
- "It's Time" (James, Shepherd, Neb Love)
- "So Soft So Wet" (James, Shepherd)
- "Bring on the Love"
- "Mama's Eyes" (James, Shepherd)
- "Soul Sista"
- "Favorite Flava" (James, Shepherd, Neb Love)
- "Urban Rapsody (Reprise)" (James, LeMelle)
gollark: It also contains valid disk IDs for each UUID and disk IDs are unique to each disk and unspoofable.
gollark: The program *on* the disks downloads a license info JSON from the interweb when it runs. This contains the features each UUID is allowed to use.
gollark: The program I use to write and sign them also writes on a UUID, which is signed.
gollark: Basically, it can refuse to run unsigned or invalidly signed disks - you can run them elsewhere but having potatOS run them unsandboxed is the only real use.
gollark: <@154361670188138496> PotatOS manages to make licensing/copyprotection to actually work well (on the OmniDisk\™s) because of a constrained environment like that.
References
- Conner, Thomas. "Freak Out! Rick James Leaves Prison a New Man". Tulsa World.
- "Urban Rapsody: Rick James". AllMusic. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
- Larkin, Colin (May 27, 2011). "The Encyclopedia of Popular Music". Omnibus Press – via Google Books.
- "Album Review: 'Urban Rapsody'". EW.com.
- "Freedom Funk : A Liberated Rick James Isn't Singing Any Folsom Prison Blues". Los Angeles Times. September 27, 1997.
- Catlin, Roger. "RICK JAMES /REACHES DEEP INTO HIS PAST FOR SHOW AT THE SHOW AT THE PALACE". courant.com.
- "Rick James". Billboard.
- Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian David (July 11, 2004). "The New Rolling Stone Album Guide". Simon and Schuster – via Google Books.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.