Behind the Front (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1998 album by the Black Eyed Peas

Behind the Front
Studio album by Black Eyed Peas
Released June 30, 1998
Recorded 1997–1998
Genre Hip hop[1]
Length 73:53
Label Interscope will.i.am
Producer will.i.am Paul Poli C-Los Brian Lapin
Black Eyed Peas chronology
Behind the Front(1998) Bridging the Gap(2000)
Singles from Behind the Front
"Fallin' Up"Released: December 3, 1997 "Head Bobs"Released: 1998 "Joints & Jam"Released: November 9, 1998 "Karma"Released: April 6, 1999 "What It Is"Released: 1999

Behind the Front is the debut studio album by American hip hop group Black Eyed Peas released on June 30, 1998, through Interscope Records and will.i.am Music Group.[2]

Most of the tracks were demos for the Grass Roots album, with added verses by new member Taboo. The song "Joints & Jam" appeared on the soundtrack of the movie Bulworth, where it was billed as "Joints & Jams". "Be Free" also features in the film She's All That. On the back cover, "Skit 3" is listed after "Duet", when it actually appears after "Communication". This was their only studio album to be released in a Parental Advisory version and an edited version until the release of Masters Of The Sun Vol. 1. On the edited version's back cover, "Skit 3" is properly listed after "Communication".

Behind the Front was released for vinyl on June 30, 1998, through Interscope Records, will.i.am's imprint will.i.am Music Group and Universal Music Group.

Three singles from the album were released–double single "Fallin' Up/¿Que Dices?" in December 1997, "Joints & Jam" in November 1998 and the final single "Karma" in April 1999.

In 1997, a music video for the song "Head Bobs" was filmed and finished, however, the band decided to not release the song as a single. Around the same time a music video for the song "Fallin' Up" was also created, however, was decided that the album's first official single would be "Joints & Jam", with its respective music video released. A similar video to "Joints & Jam" was filmed for the song "What It Is", but like "Head Bobs" and "Fallin Up", the song wasn't an official single. The last music video to be released from the album was "Karma", the album's second and final official single. All five music videos were included on the DVD Behind the Bridge to Elephunk (2004).

Professional ratings

Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [1]
Robert Christgau (neither)[3]
Melody Maker [4]
RapReviews 8.5/10
Rolling Stone [5]
The Rolling Stone Album Guide [6]

Behind the Front received generally favorable reviews from music critics. Matt Conaway of AllMusic stated: "Black Eyed Peas bring some positivity and fun back into hip-hop. Musically there is almost no realm this group does not touch -- right from the jump, the stylistic innocence of "Fallin Up," complete with striking guitar licks, sums up what BEP is all about."[1] Marcus Reeves of Rolling Stone gave the album three out of five stars, stating: "Behind the Front, offers an organic mixture of sampled melodies and live instruments aimed at those of us seeking a little enlightenment with our well-oiled boogie."[5] Tony Green of JazzTimes also proclaimed that the Black Eyed Peas "provide a musical hip-hop shot that rises beyond mere discussions of consciousness" which "sounds, well dope, with a live band accentuated by clever samples."[7]

No. Title Writer(s) Producers Length
1. "Fallin' Up" (contains "Skit 1"; featuring Sierra Swan & Planet Swan) William Adams Allan Pineda Jaime Gomez Kevin Feyen Brian Lapin 5:09
2. "Clap Your Hands" (featuring Dawn Beckman) Adams Pineda Gomez Joseph "Zigaboo" Modeliste Arthur Neville Leo Nocentelli George Porter, Jr. 4:57
3. "Joints & Jam" (featuring Ingrid Dupree) Adams Pineda Gomez Paul Poli Gregory Phillinganes Bary Gibb Trevor Smith Paul Poli will.i.am[a] 3:35
4. "The Way U Make Me Feel" (featuring Kim Hill) Adams Hill Carlos Guaico C-Los will.i.am[a] 4:19
5. "Movement" (contains "Skit 2") Adams Pineda Gomez Feyen Lapin Mike Fratantuno Terence Yoshiaka 4:42
6. "Karma" (featuring Einstein Brown) Adams Pineda Feyen Debbie Harry Nigel Harrison 4:28
7. "Be Free" (featuring Kim Hill) Adams Pineda Tim Peter Stahl John Goldberg 4:06
8. "Say Goodbye" (featuring Dawn Beckman) Adams Pineda Gomez Feyen Lapin Michael Oliver 4:01
9. "Duet" (featuring Redfoo) Adams Pineda Stefan Kendal Gordy Lapin Feyen will.i.am Lapin[a] 4:21
10. "Communication" (contains "Skit 3") Adams Pineda Feyen Fratantuno Yoshiaka 5:41
11. "What It Is" (featuring Kim Hill) Adams Pineda Fratantuno Tom Browne Trevor Smith 4:45
12. "¿Que Dices?" Adams Pineda Gomez Feyen Lapin 4:01
13. "A8" Adams Pineda Gomez Feyen Fratantuno 3:52
14. "Love Won't Wait" (featuring Macy Gray) Adams Pineda Gray Feyen Lapin 3:35
15. "Head Bobs" Adams Pineda Feyen Lapin Lapin will.i.am[a] 4:14
16. "Positivity" (includes hidden outro) Adams Pineda Gomez Feyen Lapin Fratantuno 8:07

Notes

Musicians

Guest vocals

  1. ^ a b c Conway, Matt. "Black Eyed Peas: Behind the Front". AllMusic. AllMusic.
  2. ^ Black Eyed Peas: Behind the Front. Interscope/will.i.am Music Group. June 1998.
  3. ^ Robert Christgau
  4. ^ Bresnark, Robin (September 12, 1998). "Albums". Melody Maker. Vol. 75, no. 37. IPC. p. 38.
  5. ^ a b Reeves, Marcus (July 28, 1998). "Behind The Front". rollingstone.com. Rolling Stone.
  6. ^ Cross, Charles R. (2004). "Black Eyed Peas". In Brackett, Nathan; Hoard, Christian (eds.). The New Rolling Stone Album Guide (4th ed.). Simon & Schuster. pp. 77. ISBN 0-7432-0169-8.
  7. ^ Green, Tony (November 1, 1998). "Black Eyed Peas: Behind the Front". jazztimes.com. JazzTimes.
  8. ^ "The Black Eyed Peas Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  9. ^ "The Black Eyed Peas Chart History (Heatseekers Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  10. ^ "The Black Eyed Peas Chart History (Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved January 21, 2018.
  11. ^ "Lescharts.com – The Black Eyed Peas – Behind the Front". Hung Medien. Retrieved January 21, 2018.