Aaliyah 2001: Album [verified]

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Aaliyah 2001: Album [verified]

In the years since, the album has been difficult to access on streaming services due to label disputes (her uncle Barry Hankerson’s Blackground Records has notoriously kept much of her catalog offline). In 2021, for the 20th anniversary, the album was finally reissued on vinyl and streaming, introducing a new generation to its genius.

| Track # | Title | Notes | |---------|-------|-------| | 1 | (feat. Timbaland) | Lead single. Unusual time signature, eerie synth, lyrics about relationship conflict. | | 2 | "Loose Rap" (feat. Static Major) | Experimental, spoken-word verses over a sparse beat. | | 3 | "Rock the Boat" | Posthumous hit. Upbeat, Caribbean-influenced. Music video filmed days before her death. | | 4 | "More Than a Woman" | Second single. Won a posthumous Grammy nomination. Funky, fast-paced. | | 5 | "Never No More" | Emotional ballad about moving on from a toxic lover. | | 6 | "I Care 4 U" | A fan-favorite piano-driven ballad (originally from Romeo Must Die soundtrack). | | 7 | "Extra Smooth" | Playful, confident mid-tempo track. | | 8 | "Read Between the Lines" | Sparse, introspective track about privacy and media. | | 9 | "U Got Nerve" | Anthemic, guitar-laced song about self-respect. | | 10 | "I Refuse" | Rock-influenced track with distorted guitar riffs. | | 11 | "It's Whatever" | Light, breezy song about casual romance. | | 12 | "I Can Be" | Short interlude-like track showcasing vocal range. | | 13 | "Those Were the Days" | Cover of "Those Were the Days" (based on a Russian folk song). Surreal, nostalgic. | | 14 | "What If" | Hidden track. Contemplative song about missed chances. | aaliyah 2001 album

The overall mood is introspective, sensual, and subtly defiant—a stark contrast to the upbeat, pop-R&B of the era. In the years since, the album has been

Released in July 2001, ’s self-titled third album—often called "The Red Album"—was a definitive shift in R&B that solidified her as a "digital diva" Timbaland) | Lead single

A bold experiment incorporating industrial rock and Detroit techno.

But numbers don’t capture its true impact. The album is now frequently included in "Greatest Albums of All Time" lists by Vibe, Complex, and NME. In 2020, Rolling Stone ranked it No. 135 on its updated list of the 500 Greatest Albums.

A soulful, Missy Elliott-penned ballad that highlights Aaliyah’s vulnerability. Commercial Impact & Critical Legacy