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Welcome To The Dollhouse

Danity Kane
Release Date: 03/18/2008
Original Release:  2008
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1017614_CD
UPC # 075678994890
Label: Bad Boy Entertainment
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Track Details Credits Reviews Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Welcome to the Dollhouse - (featuring Diddy) sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Bad Girl - (featuring Missy Elliott) sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Damaged sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Pretty Boy sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Strip Tease sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Sucka for Love sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. Secret Place (Interlude) sound samples  real  |  windows media
8. Ecstasy - (featuring Rick Ross) sound samples  real  |  windows media
9. 2 of You sound samples  real  |  windows media
10. Lights Out sound samples  real  |  windows media
11. Picture This (Interlude) sound samples  real  |  windows media
12. Poetry sound samples  real  |  windows media
13. Key to My Heart sound samples  real  |  windows media
14. Flashback (Interlude) sound samples  real  |  windows media
15. Is Anybody Listening sound samples  real  |  windows media
16. Ain't Going sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Danity Kane
Artist: P. Diddy; Missy Elliott; Rick Ross
Engineer: Andy Geel; Matt Testa; Steve Dickey; Victor Abijaudi; Koil; Kevin Wilson "Kev O"; Paul J. Falcone; Bernard "Doss" Malik; Sam Thomas; Jeff Villanueva
Producer: Bryan Michael Cox; The Runners; Harve "Joe Hooker" Pierre; Scyience; Romeo IX; Flex & Hated; Bernard "Doss" Malik; Mario Winans; P. Diddy; The Stereotypes; Antwan "Amadeus" Thompson
Distributor: WEA (Distributor)

Notes: Personnel: Bryan-Michael Cox (strings, keyboards, drums, programming); Donnie Scantz, Jahi Sundance (keyboards, drum programming); Bishop Winan (percussion); Mary Brown (background vocals). Audio Mixers: Matthew Testa; Marcella Araica; "You Can Ask" Giz; Ken Lewis ; Sam Thomas ; Fabian Marasciullo. Recording information: Circle House Recording Studios, Miami, FL; Daddy's House Recording Studios, New York, NY; Goldmind Studios, NJ; Redcarpet Recording Studio; Zac's Recording, Atlanta, GA. Photographer: Roger Erickson. Arrangers: Bryan-Michael Cox; Mario Winans. The cover of Danity Kane's sophomore release features the group members draped in negligees and bedsheets, and WELCOME TO THE DOLLHOUSE makes good on the breezy, sexy allure of the image. With studio help from trackmasters Danja and Bryan Michael Cox, among others, and guest appearances from the likes of P. Diddy and Missy Elliott, Danity Kane have crafted a frothy collection of R&B-infused pop that bursts with radio-ready tunes. The ladies prove adept at lush balladry ("Ecstasy"), uptempo dance numbers ("Bad Girl"), and glamorous singalongs ("Damaged"). The image, material, and sound of WELCOME TO THE DOLLHOUSE comes coated with a high degree of polish, but the precision of that polish makes it a pure pop confection. Danity Kane exist in a strange netherworld of pop culture, where you either know everything about the girl group or you know nothing about them. Despite debuting at the top of the Billboard charts with their eponymous 2006 debut, on its way to eventual platinum sales, the group didn't seem to make any impact outside of MTV, the place where their construction was meticulously, endlessly documented on the third season of Making the Band. The popularity of Making the Band 3 pushed Danity Kane into the Top Ten, and the very existence of a Making the Band 5 featuring DK and subsequent MTB winners Day 26 and Donnie J, all making albums at the same time and jockeying for success, no doubt gave hope to Danity Kane and their producers that the group's second album, Welcome to the Dollhouse, might also achieve a high chart placement. All five of the DK girls are conventionally pretty in their voices (not to mention their looks), and were picked for the group because they're pliable. Although they thoroughly disappear into these productions, dense on rhythms but lacking hooks, there are some notable tracks -- "2 of You" has slinky rhythms that make up for the nonsensical "you've got me having breakfast in the afternoon" refrain and "Lights Out" has an appealing dose of Minneapolis funk in its keyboard, as does "Key to My Heart," which shimmers slyly. Nevertheless, hearing Welcome to the Dollhouse will be most interesting if you've witnessed the labors on Making the Band. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine Danity Kane exist in a strange netherworld of pop culture, where you either know everything about the prefabricated girl group or you know nothing about them. Despite debuting at the top of the Billboard charts with their eponymous 2006 debut, on its way to eventual platinum sales, the group didn't seem to make any impact outside of MTV, the place where their construction was meticulously, endlessly documented on the third season of Making the Band. Not all made-for-TV bands are doomed to be forever defined as television bands, but Danity Kane are the kind of stiff, faceless girl group whose personality can only be discerned by a venue other than the music. Which of course is why they fall through the cracks: fans of the show find it all fascinating but those who don't watch find the music white noise for malls, designed for teens who dream of the day they can sneak into clubs. The popularity of Making the Band 3 pushed Danity Kane into the Top Ten, and the very existence of a Making the Band 5 featuring DK and subsequent MTB winners Day 26 and Donnie J, all making albums at the same time and jockeying for success, could help push the group's second album, Welcome to the Dollhouse, into the charts, with its release scheduled for March 2008 as the new season unfolds...but that would be a pretty tall order, as Welcome to the Dollhouse is a paler, plainer recycling of their debut. All five of the DK girls are blandly, conventionally pretty in their voices (not to mention their looks), and no amount of melisma can lend them personality. They were picked for the group because they're pliable, and they thoroughly disappear into these overly constructed productions, dense on rhythms but bereft of hooks, either in the instrumentals or vocals. With so few exceptions that they play like accidents -- "2 of You" has slinky rhythms that make up for the nonsensical "you've got me having breakfast in the afternoon" refrain; "Lights Out" has an appealing dose of Minneapolis funk in its keyboard, as does "Key to My Heart," which shimmers slyly, almost cloyingly -- there is no lightness to this record, and everything feels grimly labored. Maybe hearing the end results would be interesting if you've witnessed the labors on Making the Band, but anybody else will wonder why it takes so much work to sound so bland...and why we are bothering thinking about them anyway. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Vibe (p.70) - "[T]hey score space-age soundscapes from producer Danjahandz on 'Pretty Boy' and 'Striptease,' both of which have whispery hooks that sound positively addictive."
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PID # 4219687


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