Radioactive (Yelawolf album)

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Radioactive
File:Yelawolf-Radioactive.jpg
Studio album by Yelawolf
Released November 21, 2011
Recorded 2010–11
Conway Recording Studios
213 Studio
E Studio
Charlice Recording
(Los Angeles, California)
Effigy Studios
(Ferndale, Michigan)
Future Music Recording Studios
(Las Vegas, Nevada)
Parkland Playhouse
(Parkland, Florida)
PatchWerk Recording Studios
(Atlanta, Georgia)
Tree Sound Studios
(Norcross, Georgia)
Genre Alternative hip hop, conscious hip hop
Length 57:22
Label Ghet-O-Vision, DGC, Interscope, Shady
Producer The Audibles, Blaqsmurph, Borgore, Diplo, Emanuel Kiriakou, Eminem (also exec.), Tha Hydrox, Jim Jonsin, J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, KP (co-exec.), Mr. Pyro, Phonix Beats, Poo Bear, Sasha Sirota, WLPWR
Yelawolf chronology
Trunk Muzik 0-60
(2010)Trunk Muzik 0-602010
Radioactive
(2011)
The Slumdon Bridge
(2012)The Slumdon Bridge2012
Singles from Radioactive
  1. "Hard White (Up in the Club)"
    Released: August 8, 2011
  2. "Let's Roll"
    Released: October 28, 2011[1]

Radioactive (also known as Radioactive: Amazing and Mystifying Chemical Tricks) is the debut studio album by American rapper Yelawolf; it was released on November 21, 2011, by Shady Records and Interscope Records.

Recording

Recording sessions took place at Las Vegas Valley, Nevada in two weeks.[2]

Music composition, style, and lyrics

Radioactive covers many different styles of hip hop fusions, being alternative hip hop as principal musical genre. Hardcore hip hop is represented on the tracks "Radioactive Introduction", "Throw It Up", "Get Away", and "Slumerican Shitizen". A horrorcore rap style is used in "Growin' Up in the Gutter", whereas "Hard White (Up in the Club)" is a crunk party track. "Let's Roll", "Write Your Name", and "Radio" follow a pop rap style, with catchy hooks and beats. "Animal" is a fast-paced hip hop party track with a dubstep influenced beat. "Good Girl" utilizes an R&B-tinged feel, while "The Hardest Love Song in the World" is a g-funk hip hop track. Yelawolf covers a variety of lyrical themes in these album, from gangsta rap lyrics in "Get Away" and "Throw It Up", to more conscious and slightly political tracks such as "Made in the USA", "Slumerican Shitizen", "Write Your Name", and "The Last Song". "Radio" is about the internet taking over how music and music videos are received by fans. It also refers to radio stations playing the same songs constantly and singers being discovered via the internet. The song contains several references to rock and rap artists and their songs from the past. The album's final track, titled "The Last Song" described as very personal about Yelawolf's life, and it's a very emotional final letter to his absent biological father and talks about other past struggles.[3][4][5]

Singles

The album's first single "Hard White (Up in the Club)" was released on August 8, 2011. The song features guest vocals by Lil Jon and it was produced by Hydrox.[6] The music video was filmed in Atlanta, Georgia, and directed by Motion Family. On September 20, the music video for "Hard White (Up in the Club)" was released through VEVO. The remix to "Hard White (Up in the Club)" was released on November 2; the song features T.I., and label-mates Slaughterhouse.

On October 28, 2011, Yelawolf released the album's second single "Let's Roll" featuring Kid Rock. The song was produced by The Audibles and Mr. Pyro.

Other songs

The track, titled "No Hands" was featured on the video game Driver: San Francisco. Yelawolf partnered up to release the music video with Ubisoft and Complex. The music video was filmed at several major landmarks in San Francisco, California, and directed by Erick Peyton, who is well-known for his direction on Snoop Dogg's music video for his song "That Tree". The song did not make it on the album.

Yelawolf filmed a 12-minute short horror film for the track "Growin' Up in the Gutter", which features rapper Rittz. Although the track was not released as a single the short film finally premiered on July 4.[7] It was directed by Tyler Clinton and Yelawolf credited as Michael Wayne for Slumerican, the short film was titled "Gutter".[8]

Commercial performance

The album debuted at number 27 on the US Billboard 200, with 41,000 copies sold in its first week.[9] It has sold 208,000 copies in the US as of April 2015.[10]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic (62/100)[11]
Review scores
Source Rating
AllHipHop (6/10)[12]
Allmusic 4/5 stars[13]
Consequence of Sound 3/5 stars[14]
Los Angeles Times 2.5/4 stars[15]
Paste (7.2/10)[16]
Pitchfork Media (6.5/10)[17]
PopMatters (4/10)[18]
Spin (7/10)[19]
Rolling Stone 3/5 stars[20]
XXL 4/5 stars (XL)[21]

Radioactive has received mixed to positive reviews. Before release, the album was noted by the influential hip-hop magazine The Source as being a near classic, with a 4.5/5 rating. At Metacritic the album received an average score of 62 out of 100, based on 16 reviews.[11] Acclaimed Hip-hop magazine XXL gave the album a 4/5 (XL) rating, saying "more than not, the album is a standout effort that introduces the full-range of his talents as an MC with crafty songwriting abilities and deft ear for a sonic palette". Prefix Magazine stated that it was "hard to view Radioactive in any context that doesn’t label it as a total artistic failure" and that Yelawolf was "rolling over to commercial demands".[22] PopMatters echoed this sentiment, calling the album a "misguided grasp at populism" and criticising Yelawolf's willingness to "play second fiddle" to A&R demands.[18] Complex Magazine rated Radioactive as #18 in the 25 Best Albums of 2011.[23] Noted hip hop magazine XXL, Radioactive was ranked at number 10 of the best albums of 2011.

Track listing

No. Title Writer(s) Producer(s) Length
1. "Radioactive Introduction"  
  • WLPWR
2:57
2. "Get Away" (featuring Shawty Fatt & Mystikal)
  • Atha
  • Darius "Phonix Beats" Barnes
  • J. Horton
  • M. Horton
  • Shuggie Otis
  • Phonix Beats
3:23
3. "Let's Roll" (featuring Kid Rock)
3:54
4. "Hard White (Up in the Club)" (featuring Lil Jon)
  • Atha
  • Lowell Grant
  • Michael Anthony Jackson
  • Alex Cartagena
  • Jonathan Smith
  • Tha Hydrox
3:23
5. "Growin' Up in the Gutter" (featuring Rittz)
  • WLPWR
3:40
6. "Throw It Up" (featuring Gangsta Boo & Eminem)
  • WLPWR
  • Eminem[a]
4:12
7. "Good Girl" (featuring Poo Bear)
  • The Audibles
  • Poo Bear[b]
4:24
8. "Made in the U.S.A" (featuring Priscilla Renea)
  • Kiriakou
  • BLAQSMURPH[b]
3:28
9. "Animal" (featuring Fefe Dobson) 3:42
10. "The Hardest Love Song in the World"  
  • Atha
  • Washington
  • Boyd
  • Prather
  • Bobby Miller
  • WLPWR
2:59
11. "Write Your Name" (featuring Mona Moua)
3:44
12. "Everything I Love the Most"  
  • WLPWR
  • Eminem[a]
4:05
13. "Radio"   5:32
14. "Slumerican Shitizen" (featuring Killer Mike)
  • WLPWR
3:36
15. "The Last Song"  
  • Atha
  • Washington
WLPWR 3:41
Notes
  • ^a signifies an additional producer
  • ^b signifies a co-producer
  • "Radioactive Introduction" features background vocals by Nikkiya.
  • "Let's Roll" features background vocals by Herschel Boone.
  • "The Hardest Love Song in the World" features uncredited vocals by Poo Bear.
  • "Radio" features uncredited vocals by Danny Morris.
  • "In This World" features uncredited vocals by Eminem.
Sample credits
  • "Get Away" contains elements of "Strawberry Letter 23" written by Shuggie Otis, and samples of the same performed by The Brothers Johnson.
  • "The Hardest Love Song in the World" contains elements of "Always Together" written by Bobby Miller, and samples of the same performed by The Dells.
  • "Everything I Love The Most" contains elements of "The Stranger" written and performed by Billy Joel.
  • "In This World" contains elements of "Is There Any Love" written by Paul Zaza and Trevor Dandy, and samples of the same performed by Trevor Dandy.

Charts

Chart (2011) Peak
position
Swiss Music Charts 91
US Billboard 200 27
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard) 6
US Top Rap Albums (Billboard) 4
UK R&B Album Charts 20

Personnel

Credits for Radioactive adapted from Allmusic.[24]

References

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  7. Yelawolf Readies EP with Travis Barker, 11-Minute 'Horror Film' Music Video. Billboard.com (2009-09-14). Retrieved on 2012-08-09.
  8. Video: Yelawolf Ft. Rittz – Growin Up In The Gutter. The Source. Retrieved on 2012-08-09.
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  12. Radioactive Album Review. AllHipHop. Retrieved November 21, 2011.
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  24. Credits: Radioactive. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2011-11-23.