Lost and Found (Will Smith album)
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Lost and Found | ||
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Studio album by Will Smith | ||
Released | March 29, 2005 | |
Recorded | 2004 | |
Genre | Rap | |
Length | 60:27 | |
Label | Interscope Records | |
Producer(s) | COP, DJ Twinz, Eleet Beats, Freshmen, G-One, Hotrunner "TL", Troy Johnson, Kwamé "K1 Mil", Polow Da Don, Omarr Rambert, Jae Staxx | |
Professional reviews | ||
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Will Smith chronology | ||
Greatest Hits (2002) |
Lost & Found (2005) |
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- This article is about a 2005 album by Will Smith. For other uses of the term "Lost and Found", please see Lost and Found (disambiguation).
Lost and Found is the first studio album by Will Smith on Interscope Records after several releases with Columbia. This is his first new release since Born To Reign in 2002 (which featured the Men in Black 2 song "Black Suits Comin' (Nod Ya Head)"), he released a Greatest Hits CD the same year. Released in early 2005, the album features the hit single "Switch". Guest artists on the album include Mary J. Blige, Snoop Dogg, Ludacris, Timbaland and long-time partner DJ Jazzy Jeff. The title comes from how he felt he was "lost" since he's put rap primarily on hold to do films, and "found" because he's back again. The album cover features Smith with a streetsign saying West Philly & Hollywood in reference to his Philadelphia roots and current Hollywood life as a superstar.
The album is consistent in its critiques of the perceived state of hip hop, and the album has gained some notoriety because of a track entitled "Mr. Nice Guy", in which he takes slight shots at those who have criticized him in the past, namely Wendy Williams, Larry Elder, and Eminem.
The first track "Here He Comes" features Will rapping about his return to rap & versatility (a common theme), sampling the classic Spider-Man theme song from the 1970's cartoon. Other tracks include "If U Can't Dance (Slide)" which includes the "Women equate dance with sex" line that appears in Smith's movie Hitch; along with a song about a real life stalker ("Loretta") while "Ms. Holy Roller" deals with his ex-wife's conversion to religion, fanaticism and born again Christianity. Both the title track & "I Wish I Made That/Swagga" deal with Smith commenting on current hip-hop. "I Wish I Made That/Swagga" is really two short songs, with the first half ("I Wish I Made That") talking about critiques of him not being "black enough" and black radio not playing his music despite high record sales. It references recent rap hits including Jay-Z's "Dirt Off Your Shoulder", Terror Squad's "Lean Back", Snoop Dogg's (who is a guest artist on "Pump Ya Brakes") "Drop It Like It's Hot" as well as Smith's own 1991 hit "Summertime" from his DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince days. The second half (aka "Swagga") is about his return to rap ("I got my swagga [swagger] back"). In "Lost & Found" he speaks how he doesn't do the standard "sex, drugs and violence" songs as found in popular gangsta rap (artists like 50 Cent) and the similarities and stereotypes of current hip-hop. This also also contains only very light language, like the word "damn" used only occasionally, but never any "explicit" curse words, which is now very common in the hip hop genre today.
"(Yup) truck wit rims (check) throw back jersey (check)/champagne bottles (check) lot's of models (check)/Damn that's the list for 90 percent of y'all videos and songs/Am I wrong?"
The track "Tell Me Why" is one of Will's most emotional, touching and dark tracks, it tells about senseless violence, about how hate is unable to defeat love on this earth.
"Mmmmm, souls are captured/Dreams are stolen, hearts are broken/Evil blatantly rewarded/Hate surrenders, Love exalted/Hope elated, negativity is shorted"
"Please what am I supposed to say to my kids when they say 'Why?'"
The album also includes two remixes of "Switch": "Switch (R&B Remix)" and "Switch (Reggae Remix)".
The song "Tell Me Why" was originally planned to be Will's second single but producers of "Party Starter" started mixing a new version for the song already.
On the iTunes Music Store, for a small period, the single "Switch" ranked No. 2 on the Top 100 Songs and No. 1 on the genre category Hip-Hop/Rap.
Lost & Found was certified Gold by the RIAA on 6 July 2005.
Contents |
[edit] Track listing
- "Here He Comes" – 2:19
- "Party Starter" – 4:09
- "Switch" – 3:16
- "Mr. Niceguy" – 2:21
- "Ms. Holy Roller" – 3:39
- "Lost & Found" – 4:15
- "Tell Me Why" (featuring Mary J. Blige) – 4:29
- "I Wish I Made That / Swagga" – 4:16
- "Pump Ya Brakes" (featuring Snoop Dogg) – 3:34
- "If U Can't Dance (Slide)" (featuring Nicole Scherzinger of The Pussycat Dolls) – 4:02
- "Could U Love Me" – 2:50
- "Loretta" – 4:55
- "Wave Em Off" – 3:30
- "Scary Story" – 3:39
- "Switch" (R&B Remix) (featuring Robin Thicke) – 3:48 (Song only and Single Version) – 4:45 (Album Version with silence)
- "Switch" (Reggae Remix) (featuring Elephant Man) [Hidden Track] – 3:50
- "Comin' To The Stage" (Bonus Track) (featuring DJ Kool) – 4:21 *
- "We Won't" (Bonus Track) (featuring DJ Kool) – 3:45 *
- "Chosen One" (Bonus Track) **
Note: *The Bonus Tracks are found on some countries but not the U.S. version of the CD. **This track is found only on the Lost & Found album in Japan.
[edit] Album Sales
[edit] U.S. Weekly Sales
- Week 1: 99,000 (99,000)
- Week 2: 59,000 (158,000)
- Week 3: 47,000 (205,000)
- Week 4: 46,000 (251,000)
- Week 5: 32,000 (283,000)
- Week 6: 29,000 (312,000)
- Week 7: 27,000 (339,000)
- Week 8: 27,000 (366,000)
- Week 9: 26,000 (392,000)
- Week 10: 27,000 (419,000)
- Week 11: 32,000 (451,000)
- Week 12: 35,000 (486,000)
- Week 13: 30,000 (516,000)
- Week 14: 25,000 (541,000)
- Week 15: 22,000 (563,000)
- Week 16: 39,000 (602,000)
[edit] Charts
Album
Year | Chart | Position |
---|---|---|
2005 | The Billboard 200 | 6 |
2005 | Top Canadian Albums | 8 |
2005 | Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums | 4 |
Singles
Year | Single | Chart | Position |
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2005 | "Switch" | Adult Top 40 | 40 |
2005 | "Switch" | Hot Digital Songs | 1 |
2005 | "Switch" | Pop 100 | 4 |
2005 | "Switch" | Pop 100 Airplay | 5 |
2005 | "Switch" | The Billboard Hot 100 | 7 |
2005 | "Switch" | Top 40 Mainstream | 4 |