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Curtis (50 Cent album)

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Untitled

Curtis is the third studio album by rapper 50 Cent. Released on September 11 2007, the album features production from Dr. Dre, Eminem, and Timbaland, among others. Guest appearances include Akon, Justin Timberlake, Nicole Scherzinger, and other notable musicians.

Music critics have noted that 50 Cent divides between "hard" songs and "soft" songs on the album.[1][2] Curtis was released to significant commercial success, selling 691,000 copies in its first week on the Billboard 200, the highest sales week for an East Coast album since Jay-Z's Kingdom Come debuted with 680,000 copies sold several months earlier.[3] The album's sales competition with Kanye West's Graduation was considered to be a "great day for hip hop".[4][5]

Background

Concept

Initially, 50 Cent's 2007 album was planned to be Before I Self Destruct,[6] however, he decided to push back its release date to 2008,[7] and to release Curtis in 2007 instead.

The album's title was changed twice. The first time, it was changed from "Curtis" to "Curtis S.S.K.". The second time, it was changed back to "Curtis". The "S.S.K.", which stood for "SoundScan Killer", was intended to show the pressure 50 Cent felt to succeed.[8] The "S.S.K." also stands for "SouthSide King"[9] and "Shoot, Stab, Kill".

50 Cent stated that the album was inspired by his life before his commercial debut, Get Rich or Die Tryin'. He also stated that he chose the album's title because he was known as "Curtis" before he became famous.[8]

Curtis vs. Graduation

In July 2007, Kanye West changed the release date of Graduation, his third studio album, from September 18 2007, to the same release date as Curtis, September 11 2007.[10] This forced the albums to go head-to-head and compete for higher sales against each other. 50 Cent claimed that if Graduation sold more records than Curtis, he would stop releasing solo albums.[11] However, he later dispelled his comments.[12] When asked again about his threat to retire, 50 Cent stated that, if he were to lose, he will release an album every time a major Def Jam artist releases an album.[13] Curtis debuted at number one on the Irish and Swiss album charts, claiming the top spot on the European Top 100 Albums chart. Curtis also topped the Australian and New Zealand album charts.

Graduation's first week sales of 957,000 and Curtis' first week sales of 691,000 meant that the competition resulted in 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 and Use Your Illusion II, selling 685,000 and 770,000 copies, respectively. The first week sales totals of Graduation and Curtis have outsold the first week sales totals of Guns N' Roses' two albums.[14]

Recording sessions

50 Cent wrote parts of the album in his grandmother's old house in South Jamaica, Queens and he also flew to Florida to work on "Ayo Technology" with Justin Timberlake, and finished the song in Houston.[8] 50 Cent wrote a significant amount of the guests' lyrics.[8]

In an interview with XXL magazine, 50 Cent stated,

I mean, it just brings memories back to me. I'm in my old space, see old faces, things start feeling the way they used to. Being able to write material from a perspective I couldn't probably write [from] in any other space like that. And I was in one of those funky creative spaces where I couldn't come up with nothing… For me, when I come back here, it's like my feet are on the ground. I don't think nothing is more painful than having known what it feel like to be successful and then having it taken away from you. So on some levels, it's healthy for me to go 'head and come from the financial space that I'm in back to here, as a reminder, so I can actually appreciate what I've got.[15]

Music

Lyrics

RapReviews.com stated that "There is no dip in quality lyrically; 50 is often criticized for not being a good lyricist, but he's exceptionally witty in his writtens". RapReviews.com also stated that 50 Cent "manages to cover different themes very well", praising his "seduction" on "Follow My Lead":[2]

You listen to the rumors, they say, "50 fuckin' crazy"

"50 don't know how to treat a lady." They wrong
I like you a lot, I don't want to hurt you
But I call a square a square and a circle a circle
So if you act like a bitch, I'll call you a bitch
Then hang up, probably call you right back and shit
And have to say, "Baby, I apologize."
Cross my fingers, God forgive me for telling lies
Like Janet Jackson said, "I miss you much"

I really want to feel your touch…

PopMatters noted that ""I Get Money" remains the collection's clear MVP, an iron-fisted ode to living large":[16]

I write the check before the baby comes

Who the fuck cares?
I'm stanky rich

I'm a die tryin' to spend this shit.

Stylus Magazine writes that 50 Cent is trying to "revisit the raw fatalism that defined the best tracks on Get Rich or Die Tryin'", quoting lyrics from "My Gun Go Off" as an example:[17]

You know tomorrow's just a day away
If you can just keep your heart beatin' and your ass awake.

Slant Magazine called 50 Cent "one of the worst lyricists alive", criticizing "Amusement Park"'s lyrics and the execution of his metaphors which he "mumbles without a hint of irony or conviction":[18]

I'm hoping you enjoy my amusement park
There's lots of activities fun things to do.

Production

Template:Sound sample box align right Template:Multi-listen start Template:Multi-listen item Template:Multi-listen end Template:Sample box end Stylus Magazine stated that "the beats on Curtis sound about as dated and cheap as any Koch record". Stylus Magazine added that "each no-name producer (Veto and Roomio? Jake One? K Lassik?) provides the comfort food they know he'll lap up".[19] Pitchfork Media shares Stylus Magazine's view, saying that 50 Cent "should be able to work with producers who could conjure his hit-making abilities, but instead the MC mostly sticks with tried-and-failed G-Unit stalwarts and Dre-aping up-and-comers that do him few favors".[20] Sputnikmusic praised the production on "Ayo Technology", writing: "Timbaland's shred-guitar-goes-keyboard melody is just mesmerising enough to work".[21]

Guests

While Get Rich or Die Tryin' and The Massacre featured mostly G-Unit and G-Unit Records artists respectively, Curtis features artists that 50 Cent has never worked with before, such as Akon, Justin Timberlake, Mary J. Blige, Robin Thicke, Timbaland and Nicole Scherzinger from Pussycat Dolls. When asked about his choice of working with artists outside of his company, 50 Cent stated, "The album, for me, was finding a space where I am content and comfortable with my career, where I can go off and create with other artists and experiment a little bit".[8]

Sales

Curtis sold approximately 691,000 copies in the United States in its first week of release, which is the fourth highest sales week for an album in 2007 so far[14] (originally topping Linkin Park's Minutes to Midnight which sold 625,000, but later being outsold by the Eagle's Long Road Out of Eden, which moved 711,000 units[22] and later Alicia Keys' As I Am bringing in 742,000 copies[23]). However, Curtis brought in the lowest first week sales of 50 Cent's career, with Get Rich or Die Tryin' selling 872,000[24] and The Massacre moving 1.1 million copies.[25] As of December 27 2007, Curtis has sold 1.2 million copies in the United States.[26]

Curtis debuted at number two on the United World Chart, selling approximately 921,000 copies worldwide in its first week.[27] As of November 17 2007, Curtis has sold approximately 1,728,000 copies worldwide.[28] However, Vivendi contradicted the United World Chart's claim, stating that Curtis sold nearly two million copies worldwide in less than a week after its release.[29]

Reception

Curtis received mixed reviews from music critics.[30] Allmusic wrote that Curtis "is entertaining but only impressive in that 50 can run in place and still be on top".[31] AllHipHop.com called it "a step backwards" and "while the album is not a total brick, it lacks a true consistency where his previous work flowed seamlessly and almost every record worked".[32] The Boston Globe stated that, "artistically, West is always moving, while 50 is at a standstill".[33]

The Chicago Tribune wrote that, "at a time when consumers are expressing their dissatisfaction with music-industry product", the album provides "exactly what they say they don't want: More of the same".[34] Rolling Stone noted that 50 Cent is "out to prove he's everything he used to claim", and like The Massacre, he "divides between hard songs ("Man Down," "Fire," "I'll Still Kill") and soft songs ("Follow My Lead")". Rolling Stone also noted that, on Curtis, 50 Cent is for the first time "letting guests sing most of the hooks".[1]

Time magazine named "I Get Money" one of The 10 Best Songs of 2007, ranking it at #6. Writer Josh Tyrangiel praised the song as "hypnotic", observing that its appeal is owed to the "Top Billin" sample, and that 50 Cent's bemusement at his own survival and success "makes the song as wry as it is scary".[35][36] The album helped him win Best-Selling Hip-Hop Artist at the 2007 World Music Awards.[37]

Track listing

Information taken from Curtis' liner notes.[9]

# Title Time Producer(s) Performer(s) Sample(s)
1 "Intro" 0:51
2 "My Gun Go Off" 3:12 Adam Deitch & Eric Krasno
3 "Man Down" (censored) 2:50 Detroit Red, co-produced by Don Cannon
  • 50 Cent
  • The Scooby-Doo theme as performed by Larry Marks, written by Ben Raleigh and David Mook
4 "I'll Still Kill" 3:39 DJ Khalil
  • Chorus: Akon
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
  • Third verse: Akon
5 "I Get Money" 3:44 Apex
  • Intro: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Audio Two
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
  • Outro: 50 Cent & Audio Two
6 "Come & Go" 3:29 Dr. Dre (keyboards by Dawaun Parker & Mark Batson)
  • Intro: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Dr. Dre
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
7 "Ayo Technology" 4:08 Timbaland, co-produced by Danja
  • Intro: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: Justin Timberlake & Timbaland
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
8 "Follow My Lead" 3:18 Tha Bizness
  • Intro: 50 Cent & Robin Thicke
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Robin Thicke
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
9 "Movin on Up" 3:24 Jake One
  • 50 Cent
  • "Give Me Just Another Day" as performed by The Miracles
  • "Do It Baby" as performed by The Miracles
  • "Nuttin' but a Drumbeat" as performed by Russell Simmons
10 "Straight to the Bank" 3:11 Ty Fyffe, additional production by Dr. Dre
  • Intro: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Tony Yayo
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
  • Outro: 50 Cent
11 "Amusement Park" 3:09 Dangerous LLC
  • 50 Cent
12 "Fully Loaded Clip" 3:14 Havoc
  • 50 Cent
13 "Peep Show" 3:52 Eminem (keyboards by Mike Strange, additional keyboards by Jeff Bass & Tony Campana)
  • Intro: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: 50 Cent
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
  • Third verse: 50 Cent
  • Forth verse: Eminem
  • Outro: 50 Cent
14 "Fire" 2:50 Dr. Dre (keyboards by Dawaun Parker & Mark Batson)
  • Intro: Nicole Scherzinger
  • Chorus: Nicole Scherzinger & Young Buck
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: 50 Cent
  • Third verse: 50 Cent
  • Bridge: 50 Cent
15 "All of Me" 3:52 Jake One
16 "Curtis 187" 3:58 Havoc
  • 50 Cent
17 "Touch the Sky" 3:10 K-Lassik Beats
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Tony Yayo
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Second verse: Tony Yayo
* "Smile (I'm Leavin')" (iTunes pre-order bonus track/Japan bonus track) 4:29 K-Lassik Beats
  • 50 Cent
* "I Get Money (Forbes 1-2-3 Remix)" (iTunes Bonus Track) 4:31 Apex
  • Intro: 50 Cent & Audio Two
  • Chorus: 50 Cent & Audio Two
  • First verse: 50 Cent
  • Chorus: 50 Cent, Diddy & Audio Two
  • Second verse: Diddy
  • Chorus: 50 Cent, Jay-Z & Audio Two
  • Bridge: 50 Cent, Jay-Z
  • Third verse: Jay-Z
  • Chorus verse: Jay-Z, 50 Cent & Audio Two
  • Outro: Jay-Z, 50 Cent & Audio Two
* "Hustler's Ambition" (UK bonus track) 4:02 B-Money "B$"

An asterisk (*) indicates a bonus track.

Charts

Album chart positions

Charts (2007)[38] Peak
position
Australian Albums Chart 1[39]
Austrian Charts 4[40]
Belgian Albums Chart 3[41]
Canadian Albums Chart 2[41]
Italian Charts 9[42]
Dutch Albums Chart 3[43]
European Top 100 Albums 1[44]
French Albums Chart 3[45]
German Albums Chart 2[46]
Irish Albums Chart 1[41]
Norweigan Charts 4[47]
New Zealand Albums Chart 1[48]
Swiss Albums Chart 1[49]
UK Albums Chart 2[41]
United World Chart 2[41]
U.S. Billboard 200 2[41]
U.S. Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums 2[50]
U.S. Top Rap Albums 2[51]


Singles

Year Song Peak positions (US)[52][53][54][55][56][57][58][59][60]
Hot 100
R&B/Hip-Hop
Rap Tracks
Pop
Bubbling Under
Canadian
Hot 100

2007 "Straight to the Bank" 32 30 10 24
2007 "Amusement Park" 36 17 21
2007 "I Get Money" 20[61] 10[62] 4[63] 63[64]
2007 "Ayo Technology" 5[65] 41[66] 10[67] 7[68] 12[69]
2007 "I'll Still Kill" 95 52[70] 22[71] 79[72]

  • An en-dash (–) denotes where the single did not chart.

Year Song International Peak positions
Switzerland
[49]
Austria
[40]
France
[45]
Netherlands
[43]
Germany
[46]
Sweden
[73]
Finland
[74]
Norway
[47]
Denmark
[75]
Italy
[42]
Spain
[76]
Portugal
[77]
Australia
[39]
New Zealand
[48]
2007 "Straight to the Bank" 60 38 53 7
2007 "Amusement Park" 32 68 53
2007 "I Get Money" 88 72 58
2007 "Ayo Technology" 2 14 5 19 13 8 7 7 7 52 10 1
2007 "I'll Still Kill" 29 28 58 14

  • An en-dash (–) denotes countries in which the singles did not chart.

Personnel

Information taken from Curtis' liner notes.[9]

References

  1. ^ a b Sheffield, Rob (September 4 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis Review. Rolling Stone. Accessed September 6 2007.
  2. ^ a b Gailes, Arthur (September 11 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis. RapReviews. Accessed September 30 2007.
  3. ^ Hasty, Katie (November 29 2006). Jay-Z Reclaims His 'Kingdom' with No. 1 Debut. Billboard. Accessed September 30 2007.
  4. ^ Jokesta (July 31 2007). Jay Z Says Kanye's Dropping on September 11th, Denies Involvement in 40/40 Wage Scandal. Def Sounds. Accessed September 30 2007.
  5. ^ Petipas, Jolene (September 19 2007). 50 Cent Responds to SoundScan Loss to Kanye West, "This Marks a Great Moment for Hip-Hop Music". SOHH. Accessed September 30 2007.
  6. ^ Fullmetal (April 30 2007). 50 Cent "G Unit Album Coming soon". Def Sounds. Accessed September 2 2007.
  7. ^ Barracato, Joseph (September 9 2007). Hot Seat – 50 Cent. New York Post. Accessed September 11 2007
  8. ^ a b c d e Reid, Shaheem; Kash, Tim (April 27 2007). 50 Cent Talks Timberlake Collabo, Star-Studded New LP Curtis. MTV. Accessed August 18 2007.
  9. ^ a b c Curtis (Media notes). Shady/Aftermath/Interscope. 2007. {{cite AV media notes}}: Unknown parameter |bandname= ignored (help); Unknown parameter |publisherid= ignored (help)
  10. ^ Jokesta (July 19 2007). Kanye Competes with 50, Album Pushed Back to September 11th. Def Sounds. Accessed August 11 2007
  11. ^ Jokesta (August 9 2007). 50 Cent: Outsell Kanye or Stop Trying. Def Sounds. Accessed August 11 2007.
  12. ^ Rodriguez, Jayson; Kash, Tim (August 15 2007). 50 Cent Explains Last Week's Blowup, Says 'I Will Be #1 on September 11'. MTV. Accessed August 15 2007.
  13. ^ Hale, Andreas (September 13 2007). Update: 50 Not Retiring! Declares War with Def Jam!. HipHopDX. Accessed October 4 2007.
  14. ^ a b Mayfield, Geoff (September 18 2007). Kanye Crushes 50 Cent in Huge Album Sales Week. Billboard. Accessed September 19 2007.
  15. ^ 50 Cent – August 2007 Issue XXL Magazine. MixUnit. Accessed September 30 2007.
  16. ^ Josh Timmermann (September 11 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis. PopMatters. Accessed October 5 2007.
  17. ^ Jayson Greene (September 11 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis Review. Stylus Magazine. Accessed October 4 2007.
  18. ^ Sal Cinquemani (September 9 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis. Slant Magazine. Accessed October 4 2007.
  19. ^ Greene, Jayson (September 11 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis Review. Stylus Magazine. Accessed October 4 2007.
  20. ^ Dombal, Ryan (September 11 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis. Pitchfork Media. Accessed October 4 2007.
  21. ^ De Sylvia, Dave (September 6 2007). 50 Cent – Curtis Review. Sputnikmusic. Accessed October 4 2007.
  22. ^ Gil Kaufman (November 7 2007). Britney Spears' Blackout Denied #1 Debut On Billboard Chart After Last-Minute Rule Change. MTV. Accessed November 7 2007.
  23. ^ Jonathan Cohen (November 21 2007). Keys Storms Chart with Mega-Selling 'As I Am'. Billboard. Accessed November 21 2007.
  24. ^ Birchmeier, Jason. 50 Cent – Biography. Allmusic. Accessed September 24 2007.
  25. ^ Moody, Nekesa Mumbi (September 4 2007). Can Music Big-Timers Fix Sagging Sales?. Associated Press. Accessed September 24 2007.
  26. ^ Paine, Jake (December 27 2007). Hip Hop Album Sales: Week Ending 12/24/07. HipHopDX. Accessed January 1 2008.
  27. ^ United World Chart – Albums – week 39 / 2007 - September 29. Media Traffic. Accessed October 12 2007.
  28. ^ United World Chart – Albums – week 39 / 2007 – September 29, week 40 / 2007 – October 6, week 41 / 2007 – October 13, week 42 / 2007 – October 20, week 43 / 2007 – October 27, week 44 / 2007 – November 3, week 45 / 2007 – November 10, week 46 / 2007 – November 17. Media Traffic. Accessed November 9 2007.
  29. ^ Jokesta (September 19 2007). Curtis Sells 5 Million World Wide. Def Sounds. Accessed October 11 2007.
  30. ^ 50 Cent: Curtis (2007): Reviews. Metacritic. Accessed September 11 2007
  31. ^ Jeffries, David. 50 Cent – Curtis Review. Allmusic. Accessed September 9 2007.
  32. ^ Berrios, Martin A. (September 4 2007). 50 Cent: Curtis. AllHipHop. Accessed September 4 2007.
  33. ^ Benbow, Julian (September 11 2007). After the hip-hop hype. The Boston Globe. Accessed September 12 2007.
  34. ^ Kot, Greg (September 10 2007). 50 Cent won't save hip-hop with 'Curtis'. Chicago Tribune. Accessed September 10 2007.
  35. ^ Tyrangiel, Josh; "The Best Top 10 Lists of the Year"; "The 10 Best Songs"; Time magazine; December 24, 2007; Page 39.
  36. ^ Time magazine's Top 10 Songs of 2007 at time.com
  37. ^ Winslow, Mike (November 6 2007). 50 Cent Named Best Selling Hip-Hop Artist in the World. AllHipHop. Accessed on February 16 2007.
  38. ^ Albums : Top 100 – 16 September, 2007 (for the Week Ending 20 September, 2007). Canoe – Jam! Music. Accessed June 13 2008.
  39. ^ a b AustralianCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Australian Charts. AustralianCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  40. ^ a b AustrianCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Austrian Charts. AustrianCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  41. ^ a b c d e f aCharts. 50 Cent – Curtis. aCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  42. ^ a b ItalianCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Italian Charts. ItalianCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  43. ^ a b DutchCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Dutch Charts. DutchCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  44. ^ BillBoard. European Top 100 Albums – Curtis. Billboard. Accessed September 30 2007.
  45. ^ a b LesCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, French Charts. LesCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  46. ^ a b UltraTop. 50 Cent - Curtis, German Charts. UltraTop. Accessed June 13 2008.
  47. ^ a b NorwegianCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Norwegian Charts. NorwegianCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  48. ^ a b NewZealandCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, New Zealand Charts. NewZealandCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  49. ^ a b HitParade. 50 Cent - Curtis, Swiss Charts. HitParade. Accessed June 13 2008.
  50. ^ BillBoard. Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums – Curtis. Billboard. Accessed October 17 2007.
  51. ^ BillBoard. Top Rap Albums – Curtis. Billboard. Accessed October 17 2007.
  52. ^ LesCharts. 50 Cent – Straight to the Bank. LesCharts. Accessed August 27 2007.
  53. ^ Billboard. Artist chart history - 50 Cent. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  54. ^ Billboard. The Billboard Hot 100 – I Get Money. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  55. ^ aCharts. 50 Cent featuring Justin Timberlake and Timbaland - Ayo Technology - Music Charts. aCharts.us. Accessed June 13 2008.
  56. ^ Billboard. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs - Still Will. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  57. ^ BillBoard. Pop 100, 50 Cent - I Still Will, Week Of Sep 29 2007. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  58. ^ aCharts. 50 Cent and Akon - Still Will - Music Chart history. aCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  59. ^ RIANZ. RIANZ - chart history search. RIANZ. Accessed June 13 2008.
  60. ^ Billboard. European Hot 100, 50 Cent-Still Will, Week Of Dec 29 2007. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  61. ^ BillBoard. The Billboard Hot 100 – I Get Money. Billboard. Accessed September 20 2007.
  62. ^ BillBoard. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs – I Get Money. Billboard. Accessed September 20 2007.
  63. ^ BillBoard. Hot Rap Tracks – I Get Money. Billboard. Accessed September 20 2007.
  64. ^ aCharts. 50 Cent - I Get Money - Music Charts.aCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  65. ^ BillBoard. The Billboard Hot 100, 50 Cent - Ayo Technology. Billboard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  66. ^ BillBoard. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs, 50 Cent - Ayo Technology. Billboard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  67. ^ BillBoard. Hot Rap Tracks, 50 Cent – Ayo Technology. Billboard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  68. ^ BillBoard. Pop 100 – Ayo Technology. Billboard. Accessed June 12 2008.
  69. ^ BillBoard. Canadian Hot 100, 50 Cent - Ayo Technology. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  70. ^ BillBoard. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop, 50 Cent - I'll Still Kill. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  71. ^ BillBoard. Hot Rap Tracks, 50 Cent - I'll Still Kill. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  72. ^ BillBoard. Pop 100, 50 Cent - I'll Still Kill. BillBoard. Accessed June 13 2008.
  73. ^ SwedishCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Swedish Charts. HitParade. Accessed June 13 2008.
  74. ^ FinnishCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Finnish Charts. FinnshCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  75. ^ DanishCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Danish Charts. DanishCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  76. ^ SpanishCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Spanish Charts. SpanishCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
  77. ^ PortugueseCharts. 50 Cent - Curtis, Portuguese Charts. PortugueseCharts. Accessed June 13 2008.
Preceded by Australian ARIA Albums Chart number-one album
September 17, 2007
Succeeded by