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My Life (Mary J. Blige album)

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Recorded
  
1993–1994

Label
  
Uptown

Artist
  
Mary J. Blige

Length
  
64:59

My Life (1994)
  
Share My World (1997)

Release date
  
29 November 1994

My Life (Mary J. Blige album) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen55fMar

Released
  
November 29, 1994 (1994-11-29)

Producer
  
Sean "Puffy" Combs (exec.), Chucky Thompson, Nashiem Myrick, Mr. Dalvin, Herb Middleton, Prince Charles Alexander, Poke

Genres
  
Hip hop music, Soul music, Rhythm and blues, Contemporary R&B, Hip hop soul

Awards
  
Soul Train Music Award for Best R&B/Soul Album – Female

Nominations
  
Grammy Award for Best R&B Album, American Music Award for Favorite Soul/R&B Album

Similar
  
Mary J Blige albums, Hip hop music albums

My Life is the second studio album by American R&B recording artist Mary J. Blige, released on November 29, 1994, by Uptown Records. Many of the topics on My Life deal with clinical depression, Blige's battling with both drugs and alcohol, as well as being in an abusive relationship. Similar to her debut album What's the 411?, My Life features vast production from Sean Combs for his newly founded label, Bad Boy Entertainment, which was at the time backed by Arista Records. .

Contents

Considered to be her breakthrough album, My Life became Mary J. Blige's second album to reach the top ten on the Billboard 200 chart, peaking at number seven, and debuting at number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart for eight weeks. In 1996, the album was nominated for Best R&B Album at the 38th Grammy Awards, while in December of the same year, the album was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, for shipments of three million copies in the United States. It also won the 1995 Billboard Music Award for Top R&B Album.

Mary j blige you bring me joy


Background

Following the success of her debut album, What's the 411?, and a remixed version in 1993, Blige went into the recording studio in the winter of 1993 to record her second album, My Life. Producer Chucky Thompson was brought in and had originally been contracted to produce one song and an interlude for the project. He ended up being a last minute replacement as the producers Blige worked with previously on What's the 411? demanded more money when the album was certified triple platinum. Blige loved the one song Thompson produced for her, which made Combs change the direction of the album.

Combs called recording engineer Prince Charles Alexander out of the blue after Jodeci went to record Diary of a Mad Band. Alexander was brought in at the end of the record, after working on albums by other artists on Bad Boy Entertainment, such as Total, The Notorious B.I.G. and 112. In the middle of recording My Life, Combs suggested covering Rose Royce's 1977 hit "I'm Going Down", which he wanted Alexander to handle the session. However, the two butted heads over production credit issues, as Combs wanted to give credit to himself and Thompson, although neither were present for the song's recording session. Alexander fought hard to seek production credit from Combs and the two battled it out over the phone over the issue. Combs later explained it was due to receiving a flat royalty rate for producing the majority of the songs and Alexander's production credit would have interfered with the royalty rate. To circumvent this issue, Alexander insisted on having two more sessions with Bad Boy acts. One of the other songs he produced was another Rose Royce cover - "Love Don't Live Here Anymore" for Faith Evans' 1995 debut Faith. Alexander was later called back in to do some mixing and recording.

On the song "K. Murray Interlude", it originally featured The Notorious B.I.G.. He was taken off due to the song's lyrical content, which would have forced Uptown Records to release the album with a Parental Advisory sticker. Rapper Keith Murray was the replacement, while The Notorious B.I.G.'s verse would be released as the song "Who Shot Ya".

The album was a breakthrough for Blige, who at this point was in a clinical depression, battling both drugs and alcohol- as well as being in an abusive relationship with K-Ci Hailey, which was reported in several tabloids. In this period, Blige would once again dominate the charts with her singles: the Top 40 hit "Be Happy", a cover version of "I'm Goin' Down" and "You Bring Me Joy". The album uses primary soul samples from R&B musicians such as Curtis Mayfield, Roy Ayers, Al Green, Teddy Pendergrass, Marvin Gaye, Barry White, Rick James, and his protégés, the Mary Jane Girls.

Critical reception

NME wrote that the beats "reign supreme" and commended Blige for "telling her audience she grew up the same way they did, listened to the same things, was influenced by the same situations." Village Voice critic Robert Christgau gave it a three-star honorable mention, indicating "an enjoyable effort consumers attuned to its overriding aesthetic or individual vision may well treasure". He cited "Mary Jane" and "I'm Going Down" as highlights while calling the album "an around-the-way girl's recipe for happiness". In a mixed review, Jonathan Bernstein of Spin found most of the songs too "ordinary" and felt that Blige's compositions "give her space to stretch out and emote, but for all the melody they possess they might as well be breathing exercises." Connie Johnson was more critical in the Los Angeles Times, finding it "drab" and devoid of attitude from Blige, who "doesn't add her own hard-core signature to any significant degree".

In 2002, My Life was ranked number 57 on Blender's list of the 100 greatest American albums of all-time. The following year, Rolling Stone placed it at number 279 on their 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, and in 2006, the record was included in Time's 100 greatest albums of all-time list.

Commercial performance

The album debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 and number one of the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart for selling 481,000 copies in its first week and remaining atop the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart for an unprecedented eight weeks. It ultimately spent 46 weeks on the Billboard 200 and 84 weeks on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. The album also charted in Canada peaking at number thirty-seven, and at number fifty-nine on the UK Albums Chart. On December 13, 1995, My Life was certified triple platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), for shipments of three million copies in the United States.

Track listing

Sample credits
  • "Mary Jane (All Night Long)" contains interpolations (replayed samples) from "All Night Long" as performed by Mary Jane Girls and "Close the Door" as performed by Teddy Pendergrass
  • "You Bring Me Joy" contains a sample of "It's Ecstasy When You Lay Down Next to Me" as performed by Barry White
  • "I'm The Only Woman" contains a sample of "Give Me Your Love" as performed by Curtis Mayfield
  • "K. Murray Interlude" uses the same instrumental as The Notorious B.I.G. song "Who Shot Ya?", which contains a sample from "I'm Afraid the Masquerade is Over", as performed by David Porter
  • "My Life" contains a sample "Everybody Loves The Sunshine" as performed by Roy Ayers
  • "Don't Go" contains a sample of "Goodbye Love" as performed by Guy and contains re-sung lyrics from "Stay With Me" as performed by DeBarge
  • "I Love You" contains a sample of "Ike's Mood" as performed by Isaac Hayes
  • "No One Else" contains samples from "Free at Last" as performed by Al Green and a vocal sample from "La Di Da Di" as performed by Slick Rick and Doug E. Fresh
  • "Be Happy" contains samples from "You're So Good To Me" as performed by Curtis Mayfield and contains a re-sung vocal sample from "I Want You" as performed by Marvin Gaye
  • Songs

    1Intro1:04
    2Mary Jane4:39
    3You Bring Me Joy4:14

    References

    My Life (Mary J. Blige album) Wikipedia