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1977 (The-Dream album)
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | 1977 |
| caption | Original free edition |
| type | Studio |
| artist | The-Dream |
| cover | 1977 The-Dream - 2011.jpg |
| released | August 31, 2011 |
| recorded | 2011 |
| genre | R&B |
| length | 57:43 |
| label | Radio Killa Records |
| producer | The-Dream, Carlos McKinney |
| prev_title | Love King |
| prev_year | 2010 |
| next_title | IV Play |
| next_year | 2013 |
| misc | {{Extra album cover |
| header | Alternative cover |
| type | studio |
| cover | TheDream1977.jpg |
| caption | 2012 commercial release by Def Jam |
1977 (also known as Terius Nash: 1977) is the fourth studio album by American singer-songwriter The-Dream. It was originally released as a free download on August 31, 2011, through the singer's Radio Killa website. Recorded over the course of two weeks, the album was issued in response to contractual issues with The-Dream's label, Def Jam Recordings, delaying the production of his planned IV Play album. 1977 was later released for commercial sale by Def Jam on December 18, 2012, and IV Play followed in 2013.
Recording
Following issues with his contract with Def Jam Recordings, production on The-Dream's purported fourth studio album Love IV MMXII halted, having originally been due for release of September 20, 2011. As a result, The-Dream recorded additional material for a new album titled 1977 – named after the year of his birth – which he intended as a stopgap release following the delays to Love IV MMXII; the recording was done over the course of two weeks.
Music and lyrics
According to Interview magazine, 1977 still features the "catastrophically lush productions" of The-Dream's previous three albums but departs from their "epic love-gushing Prince suite or sparse snap-and-bop". Instead, "accounts of love lost" are conceived as more of a "somber shrink visit", while the singer's "wiggling tenor sounds more liquored-up and angry than ever", with the magazine citing the song "Used to Be" as an account of "how his life's changed – at one point, he even jokes about ending it."
Release
1977 was released as a free download through The-Dream's Radio Killa website on August 31, 2011, despite Def Jam's objections to the decision. The release was credited under the singer's legal name, Terius Nash. After Love IV MMXII failed to see a release during 2012, it was announced on November 14, 2012, that 1977 would be released for commercial sale by Def Jam on December 18, 2012. Unlike the free version of the album, where he was credited under his birth name Terius Nash, the commercial release will see The-Dream returning to being credited under his stage name. The new version of the album features the additional tracks "AK47" and "Tender Tendencies". Love IV MMXII would later be released as IV Play in 2013.
Critical reception
1977 was met with generally positive reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional critics, the album received an average score of 66, based on 10 reviews.
Reviewing in September 2011, Pitchfork critic Jordan Sargent found 1977s music "engrossing" and "vivid" as a one-sided depiction of a failing relationship. Glenn Gamboa from Newsday felt the record "doesn't quite stack up against The-Dream's more polished work, lacking his usual lyrical wordplay and musical sophistication, but the intensity of the emotion keeps it interesting." Ken Capobianco of The Boston Globe felt that The-Dream shares "too much" with the more "confessional" album and said that "his usual sensual production and delicious hooks are missing, but the rawer musical approach serves the lyrics' edges." The New York Times critic Jon Caramanica wrote, "These songs aren't much more than melodic rants, but that's enough for Mr. Nash, who's never been a forceful singer, but whose talent for cramming oddball twists into R&B remains unparalleled." Robert Christgau gave 1977 a three-star honorable mention in his consumer guide for MSN Music, indicating "an enjoyable effort consumers attuned to its overriding aesthetic or individual vision may well treasure." He cited "Wedding Crasher" and "Used to Be" as highlights, although he also summed the album up with the judgement that "living for sex gets less dreamy all the time".
Other reviewers were more critical. AllMusic's Andy Kellman accused The-Dream of "tedious wallowing" and alternately "licking his wounds and puffing his chest", while Rolling Stone critic Matthew Trammell dismissed his lyrics as "poorly articulated male scorn rooted in juvenile, you-made-me-cheat reasoning". Tom Ewing from The Guardian regarded 1977 as "the worst thing" the singer had recorded, finding it marred by "unhappy, scab-picking".
Track listing
Personnel
Credits are adapted from AllMusic.
- Sean Anderson - Composer
- Big Sean - Featured Artist
- Shawn Carter - Composer
- Casha - Featured Artist
- The-Dream - Art Direction, Design, Primary Artist
- Douglas Gibbs - Composer
- GoMillion - Photography
- Sam Holland - Assistant Engineer, Engineer
- Jaycen Joshua - Mixing
- Ralph Johnson - Composer
- Dave Kutch - Mastering
- Mike Larson - Engineer
- Ian Mercel - Assistant Engineer
- Terius Nash - Composer, Musician, Primary Artist
- Terius "The-Dream" Nash - Executive Producer, Producer
- Scott Naughton - Engineer
- Jason Patterson - Assistant
- Dave Pensado - Mixing
- Pharrell - Featured Artist
- Todd Russell - Art Direction, Design
- Bart Schoudel - Engineer
- Brian "B-Luv" Thomas - Engineer
- Pat Thrall - Engineer, Guitar, Mixing
- Robert Vaughn - Vocals
- Pharrell Williams - Composer
- Kristen Yiengst - Art Producer
- Jordan "DJ Swivel" Young - Engineer
Charts
| Chart (2010) | Peak |
|---|---|
| position | |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard) | 29 |
References
References
- Horowitz, Steven J.. "The-Dream Releases Free Album "Terius Nash Est. 1977". Cheri Media Group.
- (August 31, 2011). "On '1977,' A Dark Dream".
- (November 14, 2011). "The-Dream Readies '1977' Album for Commercial Release". Devin Lazerine.
- Young, Alex. (March 27, 2013). "The-Dream to release new album IV Play on May 28th".
- De Revere, Paul. (September 13, 2011). "Terius Nash – 1977". [[Consequence of Sound]].
- Mistry, Anupa. (September 15, 2011). "Terius Nash - 1977". [[Now (newspaper).
- Amidon, David. (September 8, 2011). "The-Dream (Terius Nash): 1977". [[PopMatters]].
- (March 2013). "[title unknown]".
- Trammell, Matthew. (October 18, 2011). "1977".
- Cataldo, Jesse. (December 22, 2012). "The-Dream Terius Nash: 1977". [[Slant Magazine]].
- "Reviews for 1977 by Terius Nash". [[Metacritic]].
- Sargent, Jordan. (September 8, 2011). "Terius Nash: 1977".
- Gamboa, Glenn. (December 14, 2012). "The-Dream's 'Terius Nash: 1977' review". [[Newsday]].
- Capobianco, Ken. (December 18, 2012). "The-Dream, 'Terius Nash: 1977'". [[The Boston Globe]].
- Caramanica, Jon. (September 5, 2011). "New Music". [[The New York Times]].
- Christgau, Robert. (February 21, 2012). "Odds and Ends 006". [[MSN Music]]. [[Microsoft]].
- Christgau, Robert. (2000). "Key to Icons". Robert Christgau.
- Kellman, Andy. "1977 - Terius Nash, The-Dream". [[Allmusic]]. [[Rovi Corporation]].
- Ewing, Tom. (September 8, 2011). "Message to The-Dream, AKA Terius Nash: please stop sharing". [[The Guardian]].
- "Tracklisting: The-Dream – '1977'".
- "The-Dream Terius Nash 1977 Tracklist".
- "1977: Credits".
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