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After
a life-changing – and life-affirming – two-year break,
Atlanta’s Grammy Award-winning, 10 million-selling J Records
artist Monica has completed her eagerly anticipated fourth album,
The Makings Of Me. The new album is the follow-up to 2003’s
platinum-plus After the Storm and heralds the return of one of pop
and R&B music’s most consistent chart-topping songstress.
“I’ve watched Monica, now 24, develop and grow since
she was 14,” states Clive Davis, Chairman and CEO, BMG U.S.
“She’s now at the absolute peak of her career. Her new
album has at least four or five hot singles and she’s setting
new styles as a cutting edge trendmaker for the industry.”
Kicking off
the release of The Makings Of Me is the first single, “Everytime
Tha Beat Drop,” a hometown production featuring Atlanta favorites
Dem Franchize Boyz, produced by Jermaine Dupri. “‘Beat
Drop’ is a real good representation of where I’m from,”
Monica says of the dance floor-friendly first single pick. “We
all just want to dance and have fun.” The video, directed
by Ray Kay, vividly captures the multi-talented superstar doing
just that - dancing and having fun - alongside Jermaine Dupri and
Dem Franchize Boyz. Always recognized for being stylish and trendy,
Monica sets the high-energy tone in this video and presents a clear
indication of what will be another reign at the top of the charts
with the release of The Makings Of Me.
The Makings
Of Me will engage Monica’s fans to think about real-life issues
in a way that she has never asked them to before. “Everytime
Tha Beat Drop” is one of three tracks produced by Dupri for
the new album, along with “Why Her” and “Get Away,”
an autobiographical coming-of-age ballad inspired by the changes
– public and private – she was forced to endure. “Sideline
Ho,” which deals in a graphic, forthright manner with an ex-boyfriend’s
cheating, was produced by Damon [Thomas] & Harvey [Mason Jr.],
who also produced “My Every¬thing.” Monica matches
Twista – the world’s fastest rapper according to the
Guinness Book of Records – zip-for-zip on “Hell No”
(produced by Bryan Michael-Cox). “Thanks for Tha Misery”
was produced by Sean Garrett & Dent and Harold Lilly produced
“Raw.” Also, in the production seat again with Monica
is Missy Elliot on “A Dozen Roses,” “Gotta Move
On” and the earthy love song, “Doin' Me Right.”
At the tender age of
14, Monica raised the bar for female singers when she became the
youngest female artist in history to have two consecutive #1 hits
on the Billboard R&B chart with her debut single “Don’t
Take It Personal (Just One of Dem Days),” followed by “Before
You Walk Out of My Life” from her debut album Miss Thang.
Monica’s 1999 sophomore release, The Boy Is Mine, scored double-platinum
status on the strength of three #1 R&B and pop hit singles spanning
a year on the charts: “Angel of Mine,” “The First
Night” and the Grammy-winning “The Boy is Mine,”
her double-platinum duet with Brandy. After a brief hiatus, Monica
returned in 2003 with her third platinum driven release, After The
Storm, which spawned the #1 R&B/Dance/Pop crossover “So
Gone” and its follow-ups, “Knock Knock” and “U
Should’ve Known Better.” The recipient of top honors
throughout her career, including American Music Awards, Billboard
and Soul Train, Monica continues to remain relevant in a forever
changing musical climate.
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