G.O.A.T. (LL Cool J album)
Template:Use mdy dates Script error: No such module "Unsubst-infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for conflicting parameters". G.O.A.T. featuring James T. Smith: The Greatest of All Time (simply known as G.O.A.T.) is the eighth studio album by American rapper LL Cool J. Released September 12, 2000, on the Def Jam label, the album topped the US Billboard 200, the rapper's first to reach number one.
Background
The bulk of the album came about in 1999, when DJ Scratch handed LL a CD of six instrumentals. The submission of beats took place when Scratch first met LL in the studio, as both men were working on the song "Ill Bomb," for Funkmaster Flex and DJ Big Kap's album, The Tunnel (1999).[1]
In a 2023 interview with Adam Graham of The Detroit News, who credited LL with creating the acronym G.O.A.T., LL said he got the term from Earl "The Goat" Manigault and Muhammad Ali.[2] Ali's business entity was called G.O.A.T., Inc., based at his home in Berrien Springs, Michigan.
Critical reception
Template:Music ratings G.O.A.T. received generally positive reviews. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 73, based on 12 reviews.[3] Entertainment WeeklyTemplate:'s Tom Sinclair noted that the album "finds the Queens-bred rapper in near top form. Talking trash, passing the mic to guests like DMX and Snoop Dogg, reeling off endlessly inventive boasts — he makes it all seem as easy as chillin’ on the boulevard on a hot summer night. The only downer is the creeping note of defensiveness, as though the old goat (who's all of 32) felt compelled to convince a new generation he's still relevant."[4]
Nathan Rabin from The A.V. Club found that "G.O.A.T. suffers from an unsure tone and a lack of thematic cohesion. Although a solid album by a gifted performer, it feels like the work of a rapper chasing trends instead of following his own path. That lack of vision makes the boast inherent in the title seem more hopelessly far-fetched than ever."[5] In her mixed review for AllMusic, editor Diana Potts wrote that G.O.A.T "disappoints. [...] The theme of L.L. as the older seducer who is better than the current man of a girlish temptress has been common through L.L.'s albums. It's like listening to the confessions of a horny 14-year-old teenage boy in the girl's locker room. Even with the help of popular rap acts like DMX and Redman, L.L. Cool J has made the same album he did once before, with no new twists."[6]
Chart performance
G.O.A.T. debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200, becoming his first album to do so.[7] It also reached number one on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[8] By 2004, the album had sold 818,000 copies in the United States.[9]
Track listing
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- "LL Cool J" contains a sample from "I Put a Spell on You" (1956) as performed by Screaming Jay Hawkins.
- "Farmers" contains a sample from "Ungena Za Ulimwengu (Unite the World)" (1971) as performed by The Temptations.
- "Hello" contains elements of "Telephone" (1984) as performed by Diana Ross.
- "You and Me" contains an interpolation of "You'll Never Know" (1981) as performed by Hi-Gloss.
- "Homicide" contains a sample from of "Harposaurus" (1992) as performed by Carlos Guedes
- "Ill Bomb" contains a sample from "I'm Afraid the Masquerade Is Over" (1971) as performed by David Porter.
Charts
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Year-end charts
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Certifications
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References
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