"With my third album, I’m getting a
chance to express myself in a whole new way. I’ve been going through
different changes people go through in life: the album title "After
The Storm" says it all. I’ve been through a lot since my
last record came out in 1998 – people close to me passing, dealing
with my own development as a young woman who’s been in the public
eye for ten of my twenty-two years, and figuring out where I was going
with my career. I needed time to figure out all those things. I worked
with my friend Missy Elliott on several tracks on the album and she
and I thought the name for the album describes where I am now. It’s
about finding the positive in the negative and finding the joy within
the pain. Now, I’m learning to adjust to the changes I’ve been
through and I can sincerely declare, the storm is over now!"
Indeed, AFTER THE STORM presents
Monica - whose illustrious recording career has yielded over ten
million album sales, a Grammy Award and numerous accolades – in a
new light: she ventures into new musical areas, co-writing tunes such
as the standout "I Wrote This Song" and rapping on two of
the four songs superstar hitmaker Missy Elliott produced on the album
including the infectious Hot first single, "So Gone." Monica
explains, "I wanted to work with someone who could put my ideas
into song form. Missy’s a friend of mine: I went down to Miami so we
could hang together and talk about the vibe of what we wanted to do
musically. She has a good understanding of who I am as an artist and
as a person. Missy kept telling me that I act like a rapper so she
encouraged me to rap on "So Gone" and Knock Knock." She
would put together rhythms and rapping started to become second nature
to me…"
AFTER THE STORM
presents different aspects of Monica’s musicality, displaying the
creative growth she has experienced since her sophomore album THE BOY
IS MINE, which sold over three million copies and yielded a
Grammy-winning No. 1 pop and R&B hit duet with Brandy in the title
cut as well as chart-topping singles, "The First Night" and
"Angel Of Mine." The Jermaine Dupri-produced "You
Should’ve Known Betta" is an album highlight, "the story
of a relationship where everything is positive until something
negative happens and the guy gets incarcerated.
Produced by Jasper, who she met through
longtime musical associate Dallas Austin, the cut "What Part Of
The Game" is Monica’s commentary on today’s morality: "I
wanted to do a song that asked why people have lost their sense of
morals and principles. It seems we have lost sight of what it means to
be good examples for each other and the next generation. In the song,
I’m asking, what’s happened to the principles that our ancestors
passed on to us for so long…"
An album filled with different musical
flavors, AFTER THE STORM includes a couple of edgy
groove-flavored cuts such as the Missy-produced track,"Get It
Off" which Monica says "is a party song from start to
finish!" Love, lost and found, is the running theme for a number
of the songs on the album. "That’s My Man" is a ballad
with an ‘old school’ feel that was produced by Atlanta-based Jazzy
Pha: "To some degree, I may have male bashed on some of my
songs," Monica says with a grin. "But I also wanted to give
props to men."
A duet with J Records labelmate Tyrese,
"Go To Bed Mad" is self-explanatory: "Hey, that’s
just something people shouldn’t do!" Monica states, noting that
the recording experience with St. Louis-based producers Bam & Ryan
"was really good. Tyrese and I did the song in one night and I
was so grateful that he took time out from his filming schedule to
record with me."
AFTER THE STORM
also includes the beautiful ballad "Don’t Gotta Go Home"
which features rapper DMX who, Monica says, "comes with honesty
in his raps, no fairytales. His lyrics have a depth that works and
doing the song was really a special event for me…"
A tune with much personal meaning for Monica,
"I Wrote This Song," produced by Soulshock and Karlin is
based on real life: "It took a lot of courage for me to write
that one. Writing the song was like a healing experience for me. I
knew if I could write about that, I could write about anything…"
No doubt, Monica’s third album showcases
her natural development as an artist and performer who has created a
strong, loyal global audience over the past eight years. No surprise
that the Atlanta-born singer and performer has achieved so much in
such a short time: a career in music seemed inevitable, for at the
tender age of two, Monica was following in her mother’s footsteps
and singing in church. By the time she was nine, Monica was touring
with a local gospel group and in 1993, after performing Whitney
Houston’s classic "The Greatest Love Of All" at a talent
show organized by female rapper Yo Yo and local DJ, Ryan Cameron, the
budding vocalist was introduced to producer Dallas Austin who signed
her to his Rowdy Records label distributed at the time by Arista.
J Records President Clive Davis (then head of
Arista) was immediately impressed with the young teen’s vocal
prowess and provided the necessary resources to help catapult Monica’s
exciting debut set MISS THANG to multi-platinum status after its
release in 1995. The major hit singles, "Don’t Take It Personal
(Just One Of Dem Days)" and "Before You Walk Out Of My
Life" gave Monica the distinction of being the youngest female
artist ever to have two back-to-back No. 1 hits on Billboard’s
R&B Singles chart, both also topping the Hot 100 chart and
achieving platinum status in the process. A third single from the
three million-selling album, "Why I Love You So Much" went
gold in 1996 and that same year, she performed at The Olympic Games as
well as giving audiences nationwide the chance to see her dynamic live
show during her first national tour.
In 1997, Monica scored another major success
with the track "For You I Will," a million-selling pop and
R&B smash single from the "Space Jam" soundtrack. Not
content with picking up numerous American Music Award, Soul Train and
Billboard Award nominations in the wake of her debut album, Monica
reached new heights with the 1998 release of "The Boy Is
Mine," her duet with Brandy which spent thirteen weeks at No. 1
on the pop charts and eight weeks at No. 1 on
the R&B listings, winning a Grammy Award for "Best R&B
Performance By A Group Or Duo With Vocal." The song also became
the title for a hit-filled multi-platinum sophomore album The Boy Is
Mine, which featured three consecutive No. 1 Billboard Pop chart
singles, including "The Boy Is Mine," "Angel of
Mine," and "First Night."
Following the multi-platinum success of THE
BOY IS MINE, Monica took some time away from touring to focus on
expanding her creative skills, specifically in the arena of acting. In
2000, she starred in the MTV movie "Love Song," portraying a
young woman whose life is turned upside down by a New Orleans blues
musician. The film featured Monica’s recording of the Diane
Warren-penned, David Foster-produced "What My Heart Says,"
which she performed on Regis & Kelly."
Monica’s acting credits continued with a
role in the 2000 Miramax movie "Boys And Girls" starring
Freddie Prinze Jr. and Jason Biggs; she was also featured on the
best-selling soundtrack for the 2001 Chris Rock movie "Down To
Earth" with the lead off single, "Just Another Girl."
The recipient of Atlanta’s Phoenix Award, named one of "The 50
Most Beautiful People In The World" in 1999 by People magazine
and voted one of the "21 Hottest Stars Under 21" by Teen
People magazine, Monica has been nominated for Nickelodeon, Teen
Choice and Lady Of Soul Awards. She has received an NAACP Image Award
and an RIAA Public Service Award and, expressing her commitment to a
variety of important charities, Monica has worked with The Make-A-Wish
Foundation, the Inner City Games and the worldwide "READ"
campaign. As a personal guest of famed fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld
of The House Of Chanel, Monica went to Paris for an exciting four-day
trip that resulted in MTV and Fashion Television tapings.
In 2001, Monica started work on her first
album for J Records. The initial version of the album was released in
Japan in 2002 but she says, "I felt it needed an extra edge.
There were few topics I didn’t get to cover that I wanted to put on
the record so I went back into the studio and did several new
tracks." The result is an album that truly announces Monica’s
return as a consistent hitmaker. With winning cuts like "So
Gone" and "Knock, Knock," two Missy Elliott-produced
tracks and heartfelt slow jams like "Breaks My Heart" and
"Hurts the Most," AFTER THE STORM takes Monica to the
next level in her career: "This is definitely my most personal
record. I’m thankful that I took time off to consider what I wanted
the audience to have this time around. I didn’t want to miss the
mark so I dedicated all my time and attention to making the best album
I could." One listen to AFTER THE STORM and no doubt
Monica can say, "mission accomplished!"