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Charmbracelet is the ninth studio album by American R&B singer Mariah Carey, released on December 3, 2002, through MonarC Entertainment[3] and Island Records. The album was Carey's first release since her breakdown following the release of her film Glitter (2001) and its accompanying soundtrack album. Critics described Charmbracelet as one of Carey's most personal records, following 1997's Butterfly.[4] Throughout the project, she collaborated with several musicians, including Jermaine Dupri, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, 7 Aurelius and Dre & Vidal.

According to Carey, love is the album's main theme, and the songs combine introspective and personal themes with celebration and fun.[5] The album contains a mixture of R&B beats, and the songs incorporate elements of other genres, such as gospel and soul. Compared to Glitter, which featured a variety of sampled melodies from the 1980s, Charmbracelet has a softer hip hop and R&B sound to it. Cam'ron, Jay-Z and Freeway also appear on the album.

Charmbracelet debuted at number three on the US Billboard 200 chart, and sold 241,000 copies in its first week. Internationally, the album reached the top-ten in Japan and Switzerland, and peaked inside the top-forty in seven other countries. Three singles were released to promote the album. The lead single, "Through the Rain" reached the top-ten in Canada, Switzerland, Sweden and Italy and the United Kingdom. In the US, it topped the Hot Dance Club Play chart, but stalled at number 81 on the Billboard Hot 100. Carey embarked on the Charmbracelet World Tour, and performed 69 shows in over eight months. She also performed on televised shows such as the 30th annual American Music Awards, Today, The View, the Soul Train Music Awards and The Oprah Winfrey Show. Internationally, she traveled to several countries to promote the record; she made an appearance in Brazil, performing on the program Fantstico,[6] in addition to several acoustic performances and interviews on MTV Europe and MTV UK.

Before the release of Charmbracelet, Carey experienced a year of critical, commercial and personal struggles, following the poor reception of her debut film Glitter (2001) and its accompanying soundtrack, as well as her subsequent hospitalization.[9] After divorcing her husband, Tommy Mottola, Carey released Butterfly (1997).[10] With her next release, Rainbow (1999), Carey incorporated elements of R&B and hip hop into her music, particularly on the lead single "Heartbreaker".[10] According to The Sacramento Bee, she attempted to sound more "ghetto".[11] She stopped working with longtime pop producers such as Babyface and Walter Afanasieff, in order to pursue a new sound and audience, and worked with writers Sean Combs and Jermaine Dupri.[11] Following the worldwide success of Rainbow, Carey left Columbia Records.[12] Controversially, Mottola and executive Benny Medina in 1999 used several songs Carey had written and co-written for Jennifer Lopez.[12] Carey's 2001 film debut Glitter was panned by movie critics, and earned less than eight million dollars at the box office.[10][12]

Carey's $100 million recording contract was bought out by Virgin Records for $28 million.[10] Carey checked into a hospital in Connecticut, following a controversial appearance on Total Request Live, in which she gave ice cream to fans, left troubling messages on her website and demonstrated what was considered by the media as "erratic behavior".[9][13] Carey said she had an "emotional and physical breakdown."[13] After a fortnight's hospitalization, Carey flew to Capri, Italy, where she stayed for five months and began writing and producing material for a new studio album about her recent troubles.[13] She was signed by Island Records, and started her own imprint, MonarC Entertainment, for her intended "comeback" release, Charmbracelet.[12]

Carey started writing songs for the album in early 2002,[14] before she signed the record deal.[15] She decided to rest,[16] traveled to Capri and moved into a recording studio[17] where she could focus on writing and recording without distractions.[14][18] Most of the album was recorded in Capri, although she traveled to Atlanta, New York and Philadelphia to record some tracks.[19] That year, Carey claimed Charmbracelet to be the "most personal album" she had ever made.[18] She worked with longtime collaborators Jermaine Dupri, Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis and Randy Jackson[15] and other songwriters and producers 7 Aurelius, Just Blaze, Damizza and Dre & Vidal.[15][20] The opening track and the first track to be written for the album,[19] "Through the Rain", was written by Carey and Lionel Cole,[21] was inspired Carey's recent experiences,[22] and was co-produced by Jam and Lewis. It was released as the lead single from the album.[21]

Carey decided to work with Just Blaze after she heard the song "Oh Boy", which he produced for Cam'ron.[18] Just Blaze and Carey produced "Boy (I Need You)", a remake of "Oh Boy", and "You Got Me".[18] Carey said "Boy (I Need You)" was one of her favorites on the album.[18] "You Got Me" features rap verses from Jay-Z and Freeway, was noted by Carey as a "signature Just Blaze track".[18] Jay-Z was in Capri on vacation, and went to the studio to hear the song and said that he wanted to contribute to it and added rap verses of his own.[18] Dupri produced "The One" and "You Had Your Chance". He said that they wanted to stick to the "same familiar sound" from his previous collaborations with Carey.[26] Carey said "The One" was a personal song, which was about being hurt in past relationships and the uncertainty about forming new ones.[18] Carey decided to experiment with a live band for the album.[27] In April 2002, she met 7 Aurelius and asked him to produce songs for the album. They flew to Nassau, Bahamas and recorded a mixture of mid-tempo and up-tempo tracks and ballads with a live band. 7 Aurelius said that Carey was "an amazing writer" and described the process of recording:

"Charm bracelets have always had a personal and sentimental significance for me. Charms are like pieces of yourself that you pass on to other people, items that tell your story and that can be shared, like a song. The bracelet represents the foundation of this album, a body of work that encompasses many feelings."

Randy Jackson contributed to four tracks on the album, and said it was "the most real and honest record she's made. She didn't care what anyone thought of the lyrics. They were only important to her."[29] Carey included a cover of Def Leppard's song "Bringin' On the Heartbreak". During the photo shoot for Charmbracelet at Capri, Carey happened to listen to Def Leppard's greatest hits album Vault (1995), which contains the song, and decided to cover it.[30] In an interview with Billboard, Carey said that the song is "an example of her musical diversity".[15] Jackson also worked on "My Saving Grace", which Carey said describes her thoughts about the writing, recording and mastering process.[22] While working in Capri, Carey's father[31] became ill with cancer and she returned to New York to spend some time with him;[32][33] he died soon after.[34] In his memory, Carey wrote and produced the song "Sunflowers for Alfred Roy".[33] Carey said that the song represents "his side of the family and is kind of hard to talk about."[35] The song proved to be "very emotional" for Carey, and she sang it only once in the studio.[15] DJ Quik also produced songs for the album, but none of them were included.[21][36]

Carey attempted to make a musical comeback with Charmbracelet,[37] which focused on bringing Carey back to her R&B and soul roots in an attempt to recapture her audience.[37] Critics both praised and criticized the condition of Carey's voice on the album; many called the songs average, and felt that most lacked sufficient hooks.[37] The album's lead single, and Carey's boldest attempt at recreating the ballads from the early years of her career, was "Through the Rain",[37] which was produced by Carey, and was described by one critic as "the sort of self-help ballad Ms. Carey was singing a decade ago".[38] The songs on the album are a mixture of several genres.

"Her carefully assembled new album resembles a computer preset in its soulless precision. But there's a reason. This tin Charmbracelet is a throwback to the soft and fuzzy Mariah the masses succumbed to in the 1990s before she began competing with DMX for street credibility. To bring in the customers, Carey delivers her parts here in the familiar high-pitched coo, sort of Minnie Riperton without soul, backed by just-press-play synth-strings and soft, sparkly keyboards."

Critics considered "Subtle Invitation" to be one of the album's strongest songs because of its "well executed" jazz influence. The song begins with the sounds of people dining, then introduces the strong bassline and drums. Towards the end of the song, Carey belts out the climax. Sarah Rodman from The Boston Herald described it as fascinating and wrote, "it sounds as though Carey is singing in falsetto while still in her chest voice."[40] "Clown" drew strong media attention, and its lyrical content led critics to speculate that Carey aimed it at rapper Eminem, who had publicly announced that he had had a relationship with Carey. Rodman said "Clown" was "languidly sinister", with lyrics such as, "I should've left it at 'I like your music too' ... You should never have intimated we were lovers / when you know very well we never even touched each other."[40] Critics compared "I Only Wanted" with "My All"'s instrumentation and structure of verse, chorus and guitar solo. According to Sal Cinquemani from Slant Magazine, Carey makes vague allusions to her ex-husband Tommy Mottola with the line, "Wish I'd stayed beneath my veil".[41] The song uses Latin-inspired guitar instrumentation and wind sounds as an additional backbone to the melody, and dripping water as its percussion.[21] e24fc04721

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