Harman Patil (Editor)

Boy in da Corner

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Length
  
57:21

Artist
  
Dizzee Rascal

Label
  
XL Recordings

Awards
  
Mercury Prize

Boy in da Corner (2003)
  
Showtime (2004)

Release date
  
21 July 2003

Genres
  
Grime, Hip hop music

Boy in da Corner httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenffeDiz

Released
  
21 July 2003 (2003-07-21)

Producer
  
Dizzee Rascal, Mr. Cage, Chubby Dread, Taz, Vanguard, Moulders

Similar
  
Dizzee Rascal albums, Grime albums, Other albums

Boy in da corner track 01 sittin here


Boy in da Corner is the debut album by English rapper and producer Dizzee Rascal. It was first released in 2003 by XL Recordings in the United Kingdom before being released the following year in the United States. Dizzee Rascal was 18 years old when the album was released.

Contents

A widespread critical success, Boy in da Corner became one of the most acclaimed records of 2003 and went on to win the Mercury Prize for best album from the UK and Ireland. It also peaked at number 23 on the British albums chart and sold over 250,000 copies worldwide by 2004. With the album's success, Dizzee Rascal gave mainstream exposure to grime music while becoming the UK's first internationally recognized rap star.

Dizzee rascal sittin here hypeukmusic


Release and reception

Boy in Da Corner was released on 21 July 2003 in the United Kingdom by XL Recordings and 20 January 2004 in the United States by Matador Records. In the UK, it reached number twenty-three on the British albums chart and was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI), having shipped 100,000 copies there. By 2004, it had sold over 250,000 copies worldwide, and over 58,000 copies in the US by 2007.

Boy in da Corner received widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, the album received an aggregate score of 92 out of 100, based on 28 reviews. AllMusic called it "Startling, tirelessly powerful, and full of unlimited dimensions, nothing could truly weigh down this debut". In The Village Voice, Robert Christgau wrote that "[as] someone who mocked the minimal means of U.K. garage and considered the Streets barely music at all, I was captivated by Dizzee's sound the moment I heard the import". Fellow Village Voice critic Jeff Chang stated, "When Dizzee thinks very deeply--worrying about growing up, about those around him who won't grow up, about dying before he grows up--he sounds like, what else can we call it, the real thing". Entertainment Weekly stated, "Combining U.K. garage beats and a distinctly British sensibility, Rascal spits out phrases with the energy and finesse of a championship boxer". Rolling Stone wrote, "If you want a vision of the future of hip-hop and techno, get this record". NME called it "one of the most assured debut albums of the last five years". Pitchfork's Scott Plagenhoef stated, "Dizzee's despairing wail, focused anger, and cutting sonics places him on the front lines in the battle against a stultifying Britain, just as Pete Townshend, Johnny Rotten, and Morrissey have been in the past". Stylus Magazine stated, "Most of Boy in Da Corner's most compelling moments come from this uneasy interaction between irrational youth and ultra-rational mechanized society". Alexis Petridis from The Guardian called Dizzee "the most original and exciting artist to emerge from dance music in a decade".

According to Acclaimed Music, Boy in da Corner was the third most ranked record on critics' year-end lists of the year's best albums and eventually the 298th most ranked on subsequent all-time lists. It won Dizzee Rascal the 2003 Mercury Prize, an annual music award for the best album from the United Kingdom and Ireland, making him the second rapper to win the award. In 2009, it was voted the sixth greatest album of all time by MTV Base. The album was included in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die. According to B.J. Steiner from Complex, "Boy in Da Corner brought grime—an influential subgenre of hip-hop birthed from the endless creativity of a bunch of kids from the United Kingdom—to the rest of the world and made a young Dizzee Rascal, his country's first international rap superstar."

Legacy

In 2016, Dizzee Rascal performed Boy in da Corner in full for the first time first in New York and then in east London at the Copper Box Arena. Contemporary critics praised the albums continuing influence on grime and ageless sound. In late 2016, a bootleg fan mixtape of rare recordings from the Boy in Da Corner era called Left in da Corner was released.

Track listing

All tracks were produced by Dizzee Rascal, except where noted.

Personnel

The album's credits are adapted from AllMusic.

  • Armour – background vocals
  • Gareth Bayliss – sleeve design assistant
  • Caramel – vocals
  • Dean Chalkley – sleeve photo
  • Chubby Dread – producer
  • Claire Cottrell – vocals
  • Nick Detnon – A&R
  • Ben Drury – cover design, logo design
  • God's Gift – performer
  • Nick Huggett – artist coordination
  • Dylan Mills – composer
  • Tesmond Rowe – composer
  • Vanguard Vardoen – composer
  • Wiley - performer
  • Songs

    1Sittin' Here4:05
    2Stop Dat3:40
    3I Luv U4:05

    References

    Boy in da Corner Wikipedia