It Ain't Safe No More... | |
Type: | Album |
Artist: | Busta Rhymes |
Cover: | Busta-safe-no-more.jpg |
Released: | [1] [2] [3] |
Studio: | Buzz Sundworks (New York, NY) D.N.A.B. Studios (Detroit, Michigan) Soundtrack Studios (New York, NY) Studio A Recordings (Dearborn Heights, Michigan) The Enterprise Studios (Burbank, California) |
Length: | 73:33 |
Prev Title: | Genesis |
Prev Year: | 2001 |
Next Title: | The Big Bang |
Next Year: | 2006 |
It Ain't Safe No More... is the sixth studio album by American rapper Busta Rhymes, released on November 26, 2002,[1] [2] [3] by Flipmode Records and J Records.[4] It served as his final album for J. The production on the album was handled by multiple producers including Swizz Beatz, J Dilla, DJ Scratch, The Neptunes and Rick Rock among others. The album also features guest appearances by Mariah Carey, Sean Paul, Carl Thomas, Spliff Star and many more.
It Ain't Safe No More... was supported by two singles: "Make It Clap" and "I Know What You Want". The album received positive reviews from most music critics and received slow commercial success. The album debuted at number at number 43 on the US Billboard 200, selling 63,000 copies in its first week. But despite that, was eventually certified gold by the RIAA on January 6, 2003.
The original version of "Make It Clap" (which features Spliff Star) was released to urban contemporary radio on October 14, 2002. The remix version (which features another guest, Sean Paul) was later sent to radio as the album's official lead single on January 13, 2003.[5]
"I Know What You Want" (which features Mariah Carey and Flipmode Squad) was released as the album's second single on February 24 of that same year. It peaked at number 3 in the United States, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Rhymes' previous single, "Make It Clap," had failed to reach the top forty on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart. "I Know What You Want" stayed in the top forty for twenty-one weeks, and was ranked 17 on the Hot 100 2003 year-end chart. For Carey, it was a return to form after a string of unsuccessful singles, and it became one of her biggest hits in years. Columbia Records later included it on her first remix album The Remixes (2003) and the British and Japanese reissues of Carey's ninth studio album Charmbracelet (2002).
The plot line for the video for "I Know What You Want" was continued in the video for the 2021 single "Where I Belong", in which Rhymes collaborated again with Carey.[6]
It Ain't Safe No More... received positive reviews from most music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 65, based on eight reviews, which indicates "generally favorable reviews". AllMusic John Bush found that the album "continues in the vein of loose-cannon classics like 1997's When Disaster Strikes and 2001's Genesis. And when he's on, he's better than ever, too [...] Except for a few overblown performances and quasi-epic productions, It Ain't Safe No More finds Busta Rhymes with the same sure grip on his distinctive personality."[3] Joseph Patel from Blender felt that Rhymes's "animated antics border on sensory overload, but this is some of Busta’s best work, making him perhaps the greatest show in Rap."
Caroline Sullivan, writing for The Guardian, felt that "as ever, Rhymes's attentions are divided between dire apocaplyptic predictions and an irrepressible need to play the fool, and he has included the usual complement of tongue-in-cheek japery [...] So it's Bustaness as usual, and the spectacle of him in full rasping flow is still something to behold." Less impressed, Malcolm Venable from Entertainment Weekly called It Ain't Safe No More... "a tragically mediocre album full of lackluster arrangements and inexplicably short songs. His superb cadence and lyrics are overpowered by forgettable melodies and beats that don’t matter. Even guests Mariah Carey and the Neptunes provoke shoulder shrugs. Four of 18 tracks are almost good, but the rest is hopelessly ill suited for the radio, dance hall, or any other booty-shaking venue."
It Ain't Safe No More... debuted and peaked at number 43 on the US Billboard 200, selling 63,000 copies in its first week.[7] It marked Rhymes's lowest opening sales up to then and was a considerable decline from his previous effort Genesis (2001), which had moved three times that many units and bowed in seventh in its first week out.[8] On January 6, 2003, It Ain't Safe No More... was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA). By March 2014, the album had sold 678,000 copies in the United States.
Chart (2002–2003) | Peak position |
---|---|
Canadian Albums (Nielsen SoundScan)[9] | 85 |
Canadian R&B Albums (Nielsen SoundScan)[10] | 16 |
Position | ||
Canadian R&B Albums (Nielsen SoundScan)[11] | 136 | |
---|---|---|
Canadian Rap Albums (Nielsen SoundScan)[12] | 68 |
Chart (2003) | Position | |
---|---|---|
US Billboard 200[13] | 112 | |
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[14] | 29 |