GA Peach | |
Type: | Studio album |
Artist: | Rasheeda |
Cover: | GAPeach.JPG |
Released: | April 25, 2006 |
Recorded: | 2005 - 2006 |
Genre: | Crunk, dirty rap, snap, southern hip hop |
Prev Title: | A Ghetto Dream |
Prev Year: | 2002 |
Next Title: | Dat Type of Gurl |
Next Year: | 2007 |
GA Peach is the third studio album by the American rapper Rasheeda. It was released on April 25, 2006. The album was released after Rasheeda's four-year career hiatus. The album is considered her "comeback" album, because although it was unsuccessful, it helped her to "bounce back" from the failure of her second album. The lead single, "Georgia Peach" was mildly successful, but the second and third singles failed to reach the same success.
The album also aimed to sexually exhibit and upfront a more provocatively naughtier, racier, raunchier, and sexier side of herself than her first two albums with the album having a heavier focus on more up-tempo crunk and snap-oriented songs geared for the nightclubs. The album is also Rasheeda's second independently released album and her sole album release under Big Cat Records.
Frost's first two albums were very unsuccessful, so she decided to take a break from her music career. In early 2005, Rasheeda began to look for a new label, and she signed a dual contract with D-Lo Entertainment and Big Cat Records. In late 2005, she began work on her third studio album, aimed with an artistic objective to explicitly exhibit and upfront a more alluringly sultry, seductive, and sexually suggestive side of herself in the third album compared to her first two solo efforts. During the recording process, Frost desired to have her third studio album to be more nightclub-oriented, with the album tailored more towards an up-tempo club-oriented approach, style, and theme that exuded a club-friendly appeal. Commissioning the album track listing to be centered on a more heavier focus towards more up-tempo crunk, snap, and other southern hip hop club-oriented songs catered to the southern hip hop nightclub scene enabled Frost to demonstrate to her fanbase on how she had matured from the girl that everyone knew from her first two albums.
The album debuted at #81 on the Billboard 200.