Graduation (album)

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Graduation
Studio album by Kanye West
Released September 11, 2007 (2007-09-11)
Recorded 2006-2007
Genre Hip hop
Length 51:26
Label Roc-A-Fella, Island Def Jam
Producer Kanye West (exec.), Brian Miller, Eric Hudson, Albert Daniels, Jason T Miller, Gee Robertson, Jon Brion, Mike Dean, Nottz, Patrick Reynolds, DJ Toomp, Warryn Campbell
Professional reviews
Kanye West chronology
Late Registration
(2005)
Graduation
(2007)
808s & Heartbreak
(2008)
Singles from Graduation
  1. "Can't Tell Me Nothing"
    Released: May 29, 2007
  2. "Stronger"
    Released: July 31, 2007
  3. "Good Life"
    Released: August 27, 2007
  4. "Flashing Lights"
    Released: November 22, 2007
  5. "Homecoming"
    Released: May 13, 2008

Graduation is the third studio album by rapper Kanye West, released on September 11, 2007. The title of the album follows the college theme of Kanye West's previous two studio albums, The College Dropout and Late Registration. The album artwork was designed by Takashi Murakami. Graduation, which was nominated for Grammy Album of the Year, has received three Grammy Awards, including Best Rap Album, thereby making West the only artist other than Eminem to win three Best Rap Album Grammys.

Contents

[edit] Reception

[edit] Commercial

In July 2007, West changed the US release date of Graduation from September 18, 2007, to September 11, 2007, the same release date as 50 Cent's Curtis.[1] 50 Cent said he would end his career as a solo rapper if Graduation sold more copies than Curtis in the U.S. However, he later retracted his comments due to contract agreements with Aftermath Entertainment and Interscope Records.[2]

In an interview shortly before September 11, 2007, 50 Cent appeared on the Howard Stern Show to promote "Curtis". Howard asked 50 Cent about his statement regarding the ending of his career if Kanye West outsold him. 50 Cent responded matter of factly and said that he's not seriously going to end his career if he's outsold. He went on to say it's all for publicity and that controversy sells.

Graduation topped the Canadian, UK, and US album charts; however Curtis debuted at number one on the Irish and Swiss album charts, claiming the top spot on the Billboard European Top 100 Albums chart.[3]

Graduation's first week sales of 957,000 and Curtis's first week sales of 691,000 marked only the second time ever (since Nielsen SoundScan began collecting data in 1991) that two albums sold more than 600,000 in a week in the United States. The first occurrence of such an event was in 1991 when Guns N' Roses released Use Your Illusion I, which sold 685,000 copies, and Use Your Illusion II, which sold 770,000 copies. The first week sales totals of Graduation and Curtis have outsold the first week sales totals of Guns N' Roses' two albums.[4]

Graduation in its first week of release achieved the highest sales week for an album in 2007 (topping Linkin Park's Minutes to Midnight, which sold 625,000) as well as West's highest sales week to date, topping his 860,000 opening week of his previous album Late Registration. In addition, it became the 15th highest sales week for an album since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking data in 1991, and the highest sales week at the time of its release for an album since 50 Cent's The Massacre.[4].

Graduation was certified 2× Platinum by the RIAA[5] and has sold 2,996,000 copies in the U.S. up to October 2008.[6]

[edit] Critical

Graduation received generally favorable reviews from music critics.[7] Rolling Stone said that "none of the beats clobber you as immediately as "Jesus Walks" or "Gold Digger," but most of them improve on every listen: This is an album that you first like, then love." Rolling Stone also wrote that, "as a lyricist, West will never possess the pure cool or formal mastery of his mentor Jay-Z, but he's grown as a writer. (See the off-kilter, dreamlike "I Wonder".) And given the lousy year hip-hop has had, the music needs his spazzed-out, neurotic creativity more than ever.[8] As for the rest of you rappers: Try harder."[9] Entertainment Weekly noted that "West's vocal mediocrity wouldn't be so glaring if the production were more of a diversion. There are no truly tragic compositions on Graduation—though the droning "Drunk and Hot Girls" could have been half as irritating at twice the speed—but most of the music just seems uninspired."[10] The Chicago Tribune gave the album a favorable review, claiming that "West is at his best".[11] Music critic Robert Christgau wrote of the album:

Every single track offers up its momentary pleasures--choruses that make you say yeah on songs you've already found wanting, confessional details and emotional aperçus on an album that still reduces to quality product when they're over.[12]

This album was #5 on Rolling Stone's list of the Top 50 Albums of 2007.[13] Kanye also received a rating of XL from the hip-hop magazine XXL, which rated his first and second albums with a classic rating of XXL.

[edit] Track listing

# Title Producer(s) Length
1. "Good Morning"   Kanye West 3:15
2. "Champion"   Kanye West, Brian Miller 2:47
3. "Stronger"   Kanye West, Mike Dean* 5:11
4. "I Wonder"   Kanye West 4:03
5. "Good Life" (featuring T-Pain) Kanye West, Mike Dean*, DJ Toomp 3:27
6. "Can't Tell Me Nothing"   Kanye West, DJ Toomp 4:31
7. "Barry Bonds" (featuring Lil Wayne) Nottz, Kanye West* 3:24
8. "Drunk and Hot Girls" (featuring Mos Def) Kanye West, Jon Brion* 5:13
9. "Flashing Lights" (featuring Dwele) Kanye West, Eric Hudson 3:57
10. "Everything I Am"   Kanye West, DJ Premier 3:47
11. "The Glory"   Kanye West, Plain Pat*, Gee Robertson* 3:32
12. "Homecoming" (featuring Chris Martin) Kanye West, Warryn Campbell 3:23
13. "Big Brother"   DJ Toomp 4:47

*Co-Producer

[edit] Additional credits

# Title Notes
1 "Good Morning"

Songwriters: Kanye West
Samples: "Someone Saved My Life Tonight" by Elton John, "The Ruler's Back" by Jay-Z
Additional Vocals: Connie Mitchell, Tony "Penafire" Williams

2 "Champion"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Steely Dan
Samples: "Kid Charlemagne" by Steely Dan
Additional Vocals: Connie Mitchell, Tony "Penafire" Williams

3 "Stronger"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Thomas Bangalter, Guy-Manuel de Homem-Christo, Edwin Birdsong
Samples: "Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger" by Daft Punk with master use of "Cola Bottle Baby" by Edwin Birdsong
Additional Programming: Timbaland

4 "I Wonder"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Labi Siffre
Samples: "My Song" by Labi Siffre
String Arrangement: Jon Brion

5 "Good Life"

Songwriters: Kanye West, DJ Toomp, T-Pain
Samples: "P.Y.T. (Pretty Young Thing)" by Michael Jackson
Production Coordination: Keke and Amy
Additional Vocals: John Legend, Ne-Yo. Additional Programming: Timbaland.

6 "Can't Tell Me Nothing"

Songwriters: Kanye West, DJ Toomp
Samples: "I Got Money" by Young Jeezy
Production Coordination: Keke and Amy
Additional Vocals: Connie Mitchell

7 "Barry Bonds"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Lil Wayne, Nottz
Samples: "Long Red" by Mountain

8 "Drunk and Hot Girls"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Can
Samples: "Sing Swan Song" by Can
Additional Vocals: Mos Def, Tanya Herron

9 "Flashing Lights"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Eric Hudson
Additional Vocals: Connie Mitchell

10 "Everything I Am"

Songwriters: Kanye West
Samples: "If We Can't Be Lovers" by Prince Phillip Mitchell, "Bring the Noise" by Public Enemy
Additional Vocals: Tony "Penafire" Williams. Scratches: DJ Premier.

11 "The Glory"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Mos Def, John Ventura
Samples: "Long Red" by Mountain, "Save The Country" by Laura Nyro
Additional Vocals: Jalil Williams, Jehireh Williams, John Legend, Mos Def

12 "Homecoming"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Chris Martin, Warryn Campbell

13 "Big Brother"

Songwriters: Kanye West, DJ Toomp
Production Coordination: Keke and Amy

14 "Good Night"

Songwriters: Kanye West, Mos Def, Al Be Back, Jason Miller, A. Daniels, A. Reid
Samples: "Nuff Man A Dead" by Supercat, "Wake The Town" by U-Roy
Additional Vocals: Mos Def

15 "Bittersweet Poetry"

Songwriters: Kanye West, John Mayer
Samples: "Bittersweet" by Chairmen of the Board
Additional Vocals: John Mayer

[edit] Charts

Charts (2007)[14][15][16][17] Peak
position
Australian Albums Chart 2
Austrian Albums Chart 1
Belgian Albums Chart 1
Billboard European Top 100 Albums 1
Canadian Albums Chart 1
Danish Albums Charts 10
Dutch Albums Chart 11
Finnish Albums Chart 16
French Albums Chart 9
German Albums Chart 10
Irish Albums Chart 2
Italian Albums Chart 33
Japanese Albums Chart 13
New Zealand Albums Chart 2
Norwegian Albums Chart 2
Swedish Albums Chart 6
Swiss Albums Chart 3
UK Albums Chart 1
U.S. Billboard 200 1
U.S. Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 1
U.S. Billboard Top Rap Albums 1

[edit] Release history

Region Date
Ireland September 7,2007
United Kingdom September 10, 2007
United States September 11, 2007

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  1. ^ Jokesta (July 19, 2007). Kanye Competes with 50, Album Pushed Back To September 11th. July 19, 2007). 50 Cent: Outsell Kanye or Stop Trying. Def Sounds. Accessed August 11, 2007.
  2. ^ Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Tim Kash (August 15, 2007). 50 Cent Explains Last Week's Blowup, Says 'I Will Be #1 on September 11'. MTV. Accessed August 15, 2007.
  3. ^ European Top 100 Albums – Curtis. Billboard. Accessed September 30, 2007.
  4. ^ a b Geoff Mayfield (September 18, 2007). Kanye Crushes 50 Cent in Huge Album Sales Week. Billboard. Accessed September 19, 2007.
  5. ^ RIAA Search - Kanye West. RIAA. Accessed October 25, 2007.
  6. ^ http://new.music.yahoo.com/blogs/chart_watch/33699/week-ending-may-24-2009-the-krisadam-duel-moves-to-the-charts/?page=3]
  7. ^ Kanye West: Graduation (2007): Reviews. Metacritic. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  8. ^ Collins, Sam. "Kanye's Creativity". Iomusic News. http://iomusic.com/. Retrieved on 2008-11-30. 
  9. ^ Nathan Brackett (September 4, 2007). Kanye West – Graduation Review. Rolling Stone. Accessed September 6, 2007.
  10. ^ Neil Drumming (September 7, 2007). Music Review – Graduation. Entertainment Weekly. Accessed September 8, 2007.
  11. ^ Greg Kot (August 31, 2007). 'Graduation' day arrives: Kanye West exploits his growing pains. Chicago Tribune. Accessed October 1, 2007.
  12. ^ Metacritic - MSN Consumer Guide (Robert Christgau). Metacritic. Retrieved on August 31, 2008.
  13. ^ ROBERT CHRISTGAU, DAVID FRICKE, CHRISTIAN HOARD, ROB SHEFFIELD (December 17, 2007). "The Top 50 Albums of 2007" Rolling Stone. Retrieved on December 20, 2007
  14. ^ Kanye West – Graduation. aCharts. Accessed September 29, 2007.
  15. ^ European Top 100 Albums – Graduation. Billboard. Accessed October 7, 2007.
  16. ^ Albums : Top 100 – 16 September, 2007 (for the Week Ending 20 September, 2007). Canoe – Jam! Music. Accessed September 21, 2007.
  17. ^ Japanese Albums Chart. Oricon Style. Accessed September 23, 2007.
Preceded by
Once Upon a Time in the West by Hard-Fi
UK Albums Chart number-one album
16 September 2007 - 23 September 2007
Succeeded by
All The Lost Souls by James Blunt
Preceded by
High School Musical 2 Soundtrack
Billboard 200 number-one album
September 23, 2007 – September 29, 2007
Succeeded by
Reba: Duets by Reba McEntire

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