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"Aaliyah" (Virgin), released 07/17/2001





01. We Need A Resolution - (featuring Timbaland) [Lyrics] | [Audio] | [Video]
02. Loose Rap - (featuring Static) [Lyrics] | [Audio]
03. Rock The Boat [Lyrics] | [Audio] | [Video]
04. More Than A Woman [Lyrics] | [Audio]
05. Never No More [Lyrics] | [Audio]
06. I Care 4 U [Lyrics] | [Audio]
07. Extra Smooth [Lyrics] | [Audio]
08. Read Between The Lines [Lyrics] | [Audio]
09. U Got Nerve [Lyrics] | [Audio]
10. I Refuse [Lyrics] | [Audio]
11. It's Whatever [Lyrics] | [Audio]
12. I Can Be [Lyrics] | [Audio]
13. Those Were The Days [Lyrics] | [Audio]
14. What If [Lyrics] | [Audio]
15. Messed Up - (hidden track) [Lyrics] | [Audio]





Initial pressings of AALIYAH contain the hidden bonus track, "Messed Up," which follows "What If." Personnel includes: Aaliyah, Static (vocals); Timbaland (rap vocals); J "Rockstar" Dub (various instruments, programming); Rapture, E. Seats (various instruments); Sean Cruse (guitar); Black Orchestra (strings); Ron Blake (horns); Renzo Pryor (keyboards). Producers: Timbaland, Rapture, E. Seats, Bud'da, J "Rockstar" Dub. Engineers include: Jimmy D, Acar Keys, Michael Conrader. AALIYAH was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best R&B Album. "Rock The Boat" was nominated for the 2002 Grammy Award for Best Female R&B Vocal Performance. Aaliyah's self-titled third album comes some five years after her sophomore effort ONE IN A MILLION. . The singer has obviously put her time out of the spotlight to good use. She's joined here by a few old friends, including Timbaland (a co-producer of her previous album who also shares some production credits here). For the most part this is a downtempo set, typified by the Missy Elliot-penned "I Care 4 U," a slice of old-school R&B that displays Aaliyah's sultry, fragile vocals to good advantage, and the Latin-inflected "Read Between the Lines." There's more depth to Aaliyah than her stock diva cover photos might suggest, as evidenced by the ambitious opus "I Refuse," which brings all the contradictions of a contemporary relationship into sharp relief, and the end-of-the affair "Those Were the Days," the lyrical and musical content of which reveal the singer's darker, more interesting side.