Happy People/u Saved Me (2004)

Artist: R.kelly
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Product Summary
Label: Jive Records
UPC: 00828766035629
Release Date: 8/24/2004
Buy.com Sku: 61011753
Item#: MXJTSF
Buy.com Sales Rank: 25050
Format:  CD

Song Listing

Disc 1
Song TitleSample
1. Weatherman ~ R. Kelly
2. Red Carpet (Pause, Flash) ~ R. Kelly
3. Love Signals ~ R. Kelly
4. Love Street ~ R. Kelly
5. Ladies Night (Treat Her Like Heaven) ~ R. Kelly
6. If ~ R. Kelly
7. Greatest Show On Earth, The ~ R. Kelly
8. It's Your Birthday ~ R. Kelly
9. Steppin' Into Heaven ~ R. Kelly
10. If I Could Make The World Dance ~ R. Kelly
11. Happy People ~ R. Kelly
Disc 2
Song TitleSample
1. 3 Way Phone Call - (featuring Kelly Price/Kim Burrell/Maurice Mahon) ~ R. Kelly
2. U Saved Me ~ R. Kelly
3. Prayer Changes ~ R. Kelly
4. How Did You Manage ~ R. Kelly
5. I Surrender ~ R. Kelly
6. When I Think About You ~ R. Kelly
7. Diary Of Me ~ R. Kelly
8. Spirit ~ R. Kelly
9. Leap Of Faith ~ R. Kelly
10. Peace ~ R. Kelly



 
Album Notes and Credits

Notes & Personnel Info
Personnel: R. Kelly (vocals); Kelly Price (vocals); Donnie Lyle (guitar, bass instrument, background vocals); Rodney East, Kendall D. Nesbitt (keyboards); Abel Garibaldi, Nathan Wheeler (programming, background vocals); Steve Bearsley, Andy Gallas, Ian Mereness, Jason Mlodzinski (programming); Uncle Life (background vocals).
On his follow-up to 2003's successful Chocolate Factory, scandal-plagued R. Kelly spins his notoriety for sympathy, acknowledging that he's a flawed man and a sinner, but he believes in God and is just looking for love and peace. That, in a nutshell, is the theme of Happy People/U Saved Me, a double disc containing two distinct albums (just like OutKast's Speakerboxx/The Love Below). The first, Happy People, is a seductive, late-night album about positivity and love, the second all about salvation and God. Taken as a whole, the album presents Kelly as a saved sinner who still struggles with temptation -- struggles that are chronicled joyfully on Happy People and remorsefully on U Saved Me. Since Happy People/U Saved Me delivers two distinct and cohesive albums, it offers further ammunition for those defenders of Kelly who claim that he's made the best music of his career when under fire. There's validity to that argument. Kelly has shrugged off the celeb cameos that littered his earlier work and he's backed away from any contemporary beats, relying on the classic '70s soul that has always been at the core of his best music. He's turned inward, and that insularity has helped focus him, giving Happy People the feel of an old-school loverman record. At its core, Happy People is a seduction record, and seduction has always been Kelly's strength, so it shouldn't be a huge surprise that it, overall, is the more successful album of the two, the one that sustains its romantic mood and delivers it with stylish economy. As a record, it's assured and coherent, with little flab and a consistent vision; it's one of his strongest efforts. But U Saved Me isn't far behind as a cohesive work either, perhaps lacking the hooks of its companion but never deviating from its religious spirit. Overall, Happy People/U Saved Me captures Kelly at the top of his game as a record-maker, which makes it a definitive work of sorts. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Defenders of R. Kelly implore listeners to separate the music from the man, which is a good rule to follow in general, but the specifics of his case make it a little harder to do. If the child pornography allegations leveled against him weren't so heinous (not to mention detailed and allegedly supported by videotapes), and if he weren't so quick to paint himself as a martyr -- highlighted by, but not limited to, him bizarrely empathizing with Osama Bin Laden in a 2003 interview with Blender Magazine -- it might be easier to ignore his trials and tribulations and focus on the art. Of course, a whirlwind of similar charges, including an annulled marriage to the teenage Aaliyah, doesn't exactly help matters either, nor does his music. His catalog is soaked in sex and gleefully shallow, celebrating the pleasures of the moment, whether it's carnal ("Bump n' Grind") or corny ("I Believe I Can Fly"). The heightened graphic sexuality of his oeuvre feeds suspicions that the allegations, even if they can't be proved, have weight, which makes it very hard for some listeners to hear Kelly's music without thinking of the scandals.
And, when it comes down to it, Kelly doesn't really want you to forget those scandals either. Without them, he can't play the martyr, which he eagerly does, both directly and indirectly, on the music he's made since the scandal. Instead of getting defiant -- as did Michael Jackson, when he attacked prosecutor Tom Sneddon in the embarrassing, barely veiled "D.S." -- Kelly spins his notoriety for sympathy, acknowledging that he's a flawed man and a sinner, but he believes in God and he's just looking for love and peace. That, in a nutshell, are the themes of Happy People/U Saved Me, a double disc containing two distinct albums (just like OutKast's Speakerboxx/The Love Below). The first, Happy People, is a seductive, late-night album about positivity and love, the second all about salvation and God. This is no coincidence. Kelly is heading off any allegations that he's a criminal by painting himself as a saved sinner who still struggles with temptation, struggles that are chronicled joyfully on Happy People and with remorse on U Saved Me. It's hard not to believe this character redefinition is a calculated move -- not in the least because it coincides with the lack of a Parental Warning label and a noticeable abandonment of his trademark explicitness -- designed to strengthen the fans, lure the listeners who don't care, and win over, if not skeptics, at least potential jurors.
On both Happy People and U Saved Me Kelly's motives are transparent as they were on "Sex Me" -- there's never been much subtext to his music, which makes his newfound sincerity suspect, particularly on the religious U Saved Me. He may switch the specific sins -- instead of a pedophile and pornographer, he's a drunk driver on the title track, merely a rogue on "How Did You Manage" -- in effort to absolve himself of guilt from any real-life accusations, yet this still gives him the opportunity to ask for forgiveness for any number of unnamed sins. No matter how Kelly pleas for forgiveness though, he's singing as if he's already been saved, as if he's taken salvation for granted. That's the essence of U Saved Me: it's one of the rare religious albums where it's all about the man, not the Lord. In contrast, Happy People is all about the women and, at times, the healing power of love. It's a seduction record and seduction has always been Kelly's strength, so it shouldn't be a huge surprise that it, overall, is the more successful album of the two, the one that sustains its romantic mood and delivers it with stylish economy. As a record, it's assured and coherent, with little flab and a consistent vision; it's one of his strongest efforts. But U Saved Me isn't far behind as a cohesive work either, perhaps lacking the hooks of its companion, but never deviating from its religious schmaltz, which is delivered with the conviction of a good carnival huckster.
Since Happy People/U Saved Me delivers two distinct and cohesive albums, it could conceivably offer further ammunition for those defenders of Kelly who claim that he's made the best music of his career when under fire. There's some validity to that argument. Kelly has shrugged off the celeb cameos that littered his prescandal work (though, be honest, would Celine Dion guest on an R. Kelly record these days?), and he's turned away from any contemporary beats, relying on the classic '70s soul that has always been at the core of his best music. He's turned inward, and that insularity has helped focus him, giving Happy People the feel of an old-school loverman record and U Saved Me a saccharine piety, qualities which enhance both records. But the problem with Kelly the musician remains the same -- he's a record-maker, not a songwriter, crafting grooves and sounds that may be seductive but have no substance whatsoever. He has genuine skills as a record-maker, as Happy People proves better than nearly any of his other albums, but those skills support music that's decidedly flimsy and falls apart upon close listening, when the hooks seem threadbare and the sentiments are either sleazy, self-pitying, or a repellant mixture of both. Happy People/U Saved Me capture this flaw better than nearly any of Kelly's work, which might make it a definitive work of sorts since he's at the top of his game as both a craftsman and conman. For those that believe the con, it's as seductive as ever, but for those that see through his act, it's harder than ever to stomach. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
R. Kelly's music is sometimes hard to separate from his borderline-absurd real-life misadventures, since hi

Producer: R. Kelly

Engineer: Peter Mokran; Abel Garibaldi; Andy Gallas

Musical Guests
Kelly Price
Kim Burrell
Maurice Mahon

 
Compilation Appearances
Vol. 1-Sexy Mix Usa
Life After Death (Explicit Version)
Strip Jointz-Hot Songs For Sexy Dancers
Share My World
One Night With You: The Best of Love Vol. 2
Soul Of A Woman
Good Side Bad Side (Explicit Version)
Life After Death (Clean Version)
These Are Special Times
Vol. 2-Strip Jointz
Life
Forever (Explicit Version)
Wood (Explicit Version)
Shaft (Explicit Version)
Mirror Mirror
Dynasty-Roc La Familia 2000 (Explicit Version)
Monster Booty
Vol. 6-Now That's What I Call Music
1990's Americas Top 10
Fast and The Furious (Explicit Version)
All The Way-A Decade Of Song
Ali (Explicit Version)
Jealous Ones Still Envy (J.O.S (Explicit Version)
Jealous Ones Still Envy (J.O.S (Clean Version)
Body + Soul: No Control
Monsta Jamz
The Senior
When I'm With You
2 Fast 2 Furious (Explicit Version)
2 Fast 2 Furious (Clean Version)
Hip Hop Vol.1 In The Mix With Du Def
Booty Time
Totally Hits 2003
This Is Not A Test (Clean Version)
Vol. 14-Now That's What I Call Music
Big Money Heavyweights (Explicit Version)
Love Don't Cost A Thing
Tha Down Low
Vol. 15-Now That's What I Call Music
Source Hip Hop Hits: Volume 8
Source Hip Hop Hits: vol 8 (Explicit Version)
Essential Isley Brothers
THE DEFinition
Goodies
Ultimate Christmas 2
Sexy Soul Men
All The Way...a Decade Of Song(SACD)
Nu Nation Project
Powerballin (Explicit Version)
Kamikaze (Explicit Version)
R.U.L.E. (Explicit Version)
D.o.d. (clean) (w/ Bonus DVD) (Limited Edition)
D.o.d. 0205 (Explicit Version)
Island Def Jam Recording Presents 1
From Q With Love
D O D (chopped & Screwed) (Explicit Version)
Renaissance Presents Pacha Ibiza 2
Chapter 3:flesh
Pa'l Mundo
Duets: The Final Chapter (Explicit Version)
Duets:the Final Cha(clean
Baby Makin Music
Exodus
Exodus(Explicit Version)
Greatest Hits(Limited Edition)
Slow Motion 2
Groove Station 12 (Can)
Release Therapy (Explicit Version)
Release Therapy (clean)
Dj Kazzanova:reggaton Mixes
Blue Carpet Treatment (Explicit Version)
Blue Carpet Treatment (Cln)
Inspiration: Thug Motivation 102 (Cln)
Alter Ego(Explicit Version)
Voices From The Fifa World Cup:offici
Body & Soul: Midnight Fire
Tyler Perry's Daddy's Little Girls
Greatest Hits (Explicit Version)
Greatest Hits (Cln)
From Nothin To Somethin(Explicit Version)
Power Of Love
Young Jeezy Presents Usda:cold Summer(Explicit Version)
Young Jeezy Presents Usda:cold Summer
Toby Love Reloaded(w/ Bonus DVD)
Urban Groove
Adrenaline Rush 2007
Definitive Collection
One Man Band Man(Explicit Version)
One Man Band Man
Drank Epidemic 5(Explicit Version)
These Are Special Times(w/ Bonus DVD)
Brass Knuckles
Greatest Hits
Trilla
Solution
Solution
Trilla
Brass Knucles
Wackness (Ost)
Wackness (Ost)(Explicit Version)
Best Of Syleena Johnson
Tropical Thunder
Doll Domination
Doll Domination
Love Behind The Melody
My Love Essential Collection
My Love Ultimate Essential Collection

 
Associated Artists and Works
The Best Of Both Worlds [PA] ~ Jay-Z
The Best Of Both Worlds [Edited] ~ Jay-Z
Jay-Z
Jay-Z
Jay-Z
Best Of Both Worlds ~ Jay-Z
Jay-Z
Jay-Z
Jay-Z
R. Kelly Smooth Jazz Tribute ~ Smooth Jazz All Stars
Spoke, DJ
Spoke, DJ
Spoke, DJ
R. Kelly: Smooth Jazz Tribute ~ The Smooth Jazz All Stars
Various Artists

 
Technical Info
Release Date : 08/24/2004
Original Release Date : 2004
Catalog ID : 60356
Label : Jive Records (USA)
Number of Discs : 2
Studio/Live : Studio
Mono/Stereo : Stereo
SPAR Code : n/a
UPC : 00828766035629

 
Professional Reviews
Rolling Stone (p.140)
- 3 stars out of 5 - "HAPPY PEOPLE aims for dancing and romancing, while U SAVED ME calls for fervent prayer....Kelly is the master of the ultra-slow groove, and the songs on U SAVED ME take their time, then use gospel's strategic buildups to sweep Kelly towards faith."

Entertainment Weekly (p.122)
- "Kelly knows record making. The songs, all of which he wrote and produced, have a clean and fluid directness." - Grade: B

Uncut (p.120)
- 4 stars out of 5 - "HAPPY PEOPLE is an extraordinarily buoyant record giving off irresistible party vibes..."

  
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