Keshia Chanté (album)

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Keshia Chanté
ViK. Recordings
  • BMG Music Canada
  • UOMO Music Inc.
  • ProducerPerry Alexander, Young Gavin, Kuya, Lonnie Szoke
    Keshia Chanté chronology
    Keshia Chanté
    (2004)
    2U
    (2006)

    Keshia Chanté is a self-titled debut studio album by Canadian singer

    Juno Award
    for R&B/Soul Recording of the Year, making Chanté the youngest winner. The album garnered numerous awards and accolades.

    Singles

    The album features the singles "Shook", "Unpredictable", "Bad Boy", "Does He Love Me?" ft. Foxy Brown and "Let The Music Take You". The album was certified gold.[1]

    Her debut single "Shook (The Answer)" was released in early 2003, when Chanté was only 14 years old. It won an

    Canadian Urban Music Awards Chanté swept all three of her nominations, winning awards for Best New Artist, Video of the Year (for "Bad Boy"), Fans' Choice Award and taking home the Rising Star of the Year award.[8] In that same month, she also sang the national anthem at the Canadian Football League's Grey Cup championship game.[11]

    In December 2004, Chanté headlined a concert at Nathan Phillips Square in Toronto for New Year's Eve.[12] In February 2005, Chanté won Chartattack Awards for Best Album and Sexiest Female. During the same month, she was also selected to represent Canada at Expo 2005 held in Japan. In July 2005, Chanté went on a cross-Canada mall and venue tour sponsored by Solo Mobile (Bell), EckoRed and SPC sponsored Chanté's tour across Canada which helped raise awareness for the phone counseling service Kids Help Phone. In September 2005, Chanté performed on tour with Destiny's Child throughout Canada during their Destiny Fulfilled... and Lovin' It tour, and is also included on their Live in Atlanta tour DVD. In October 2005, Chanté received four nominations at the Urban Music Awards.[13]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    Allmusic
    [2]

    Tara Henley of The Georgia Straight noted that "Beneath the slickly produced, hip-hop--tinged, pop veneer of tracks like "Shook (The Answer)" lies an arresting voice, magnetic charisma, and driving ambition."[3]

    "Unpredictable"

    "Unpredictable" features an interpolated melody from "

    A Dream" by DeBarge. Denise Sheppard from Amazon said "Unpredictable" was "a sugar-pop track that definitely appealed to her younger audience.'"[4]

    Charts and certifications

    "Unpredictable" went No. 1 on both radio & video charts, including MuchMusic & YTV's Hitlist.[5]

    "Bad Boy" and "Does He Love Me" went No. 1 on the MuchMusic video charts.

    All five singles were Top 10 at radio.

    "Does He Love Me" and "Bad Boy" won the SOCAN No.1 Award.[6]

    Track listing

    Keshia Chanté — Standard edition
    No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
    1."Intro"
    • Perry Alexander
    0:41
    2."Does He Love Me" (featuring Foxy Brown)
    • Young Gavin
    • Ty Fife[a]
    3:39
    3."Spinnin'"
    3:50
    4."Unpredictable"
    3:35
    5."Bad Boy Interlude"
    • A. Alexander
    • Desman
    • Gayle
    • Perry
    • P. Alexander
    1:20
    6."Bad Boy"
    • A. Alexander
    • Perry
    • Gayle
    • Desman
    • P. Alexander
    • Gayle[a]
    3:44
    7."Singles Night"
    • Alex G
    • Mark Sheehan
    • Daniel O'Donogue
    3:53
    8."Let the Music Take You"
    • Gayle
    • Lonnie Szoke
    • Chanté
    • Lonnie Szoke
    • Kenny Krush
    3:59
    9."Slackin' Producers Interlude"
    • Chanté
    • Perry
    • P. Alexander
    0:27
    10."Shook (The Answer)"
    • Desman
    • Camara Alford
    • Robert Gerongco
    • Samuel Greongco
    • Albert Johnson
    • Kejuan Muchita
    • P. Alexander
    • Alford
    4:12
    11."Tonight"
    • A. Alexander
    • Desman
    • Gayle
    • Perry
    • P. Alexander
    • Desman
    • Gayle
    4:04
    12."Together"4:03
    13."True Colours"
    • A. Alexander
    • Gayle
    • Perry
    • P. Alexander
    • Gayle
    3:51
    14."Little Things"
    • A. Alexander
    • Gayle
    • Perry
    • Alexander
    • Gayle
    3:23
    15."Come Fly with Me" (includes 16 seconds of silence at the end)
    • A. Alexander
    • Gayle
    • Perry
    • P. Alexander
    • Gayle
    4:24
    16."Bad Boy (Reggae Remix)" (featuring Shakari Nyte and Jelleestone)
    • A. Alexander
    • Perry
    • Gayle
    • Desman
     4:41
    Total length:53:39
    Sample credits
    • "Unpredictable" contains an element of "
      A Dream
      " (1983) performed and written by Bunny DeBarge.
    • "Shook (The Answer)" contains a sample from "
      Shook Ones (Part II)" (1995) performed by Mobb Deep, written by Prodigy and Havoc
      .

    Awards

    Won

    Singles

    • "Shook (The Answer)" (2003)
    • "Unpredictable" (2003)
    • "Bad Boy" (2004)
    • "Does He Love Me" (2004)
    • "Let The Music Take U" (2005)

    Weekly charts

    Chart (2004) Peak
    position
    Nielsen SoundScan)[7]
    12
    Canadian R&B Albums (
    Nielsen SoundScan)[8]
    6

    Certifications

    Certifications and sales for "Keshia Chanté"
    Region Certification Certified units/sales
    Canada (Music Canada)[9] Gold 50,000^

    ^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

    References

    1. ^ "Canadian Recording Industry Association (CRIA): Gold & Platinum". Cria.ca. Archived from the original on 2010-03-31. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
    2. AllMusic
      . Retrieved 2011-06-20.
    3. ^ Henley, Tara (2004-09-09). "Keshia Chanté Handles Success Like A Veteran | Vancouver, Canada". Straight.com. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
    4. ^ "Keshia Chanté". Retrieved 23 May 2023 – via Amazon.
    5. ^ a b c d e "Keshia Chanté To Sing National Anthem At Grey Cup". OttawaStart.com. 2004-10-23. Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2011-06-20.
    6. ^ "Juno Awards 2005 Winners". The Canadian Music Scene. Archived from the original on 2011-07-16. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
    7. ^ "Albums : Top 100". Jam!. July 15, 2004. Archived from the original on December 14, 2004. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
    8. ^ "R&B : Top 50". Jam!. July 29, 2004. Archived from the original on August 3, 2004. Retrieved April 12, 2023.
    9. ^ "Canadian album certifications – Keshia Chanté – Keshia Chanté". Music Canada.