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Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape

Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape is the fourth studio album by American soul singer and rapper Meshell Ndegeocello, released on June 4, 2002 by Maverick Records. Following the commercial underperformance of her third studio album, Bitter (1999), her label encouraged her to return to her earlier sound and record an album that sounded more "black". Ndegeocello collaborated with a number of prominent Black musicians, including Talib Kweli, Missy Elliott, and Tweet, as well as her backing band, the Conscientious Objectors, and recorded the album during the summer of 2001. The record, which Ndegeocello modeled on the mixtapes of her childhood, adopted a hip-hop and R&B-influenced sound and political lyrics similar to that of her debut album, Plantation Lullabies (1993), focusing on themes such as consumerism, revolution, religion, and same-sex attraction. Throughout the album, Ndegeocello also features samples of recorded speeches by Black activists, poets, and musicians, such as Angela Davis, Gil Scott-Heron, Countee Cullen, and Etheridge Knight.

Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape
Studio album by
ReleasedJune 4, 2002
RecordedJune–July 2001[1]
StudioHyde Street Studios, Tenderloin, San Francisco[1]
Genre
Length59:06
LabelMaverick
ProducerAllen Cato, Meshell Ndegeocello
Meshell Ndegeocello chronology
Bitter
(1999)
Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape
(2002)
Comfort Woman
(2003)
Singles from Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape
  1. "Pocketbook"
    Released: April 8, 2002
  2. "Earth (Ben Watt Remix)"
    Released: June 11, 2002

The album was originally slated to come out in 2001, but its release was repeatedly delayed due to some lyrics regarded as related to the September 11 attacks. Upon its release, the album received universal acclaim from music critics, who praised Ndegeocello's politically conscious lyrics, as well as the assortment of musical styles. Multiple critics ranked it one of the best albums of 2002. In 2003, the album was nominated for Best Contemporary R&B Album at the 45th Annual Grammy Awards, as well as a GLAAD Media Award. The album entered the Billboard 200 and Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums charts at numbers 67 and 21, respectively, and spawned two singles: a remix of "Pocketbook", featuring Tweet and Redman, and a remix of "Earth", which became a top 20 hit on the Dance Club Songs chart. The album continues to be held in high regard by some critics.

Background edit

Ndegeocello released her debut studio album, Plantation Lullabies, in 1993 on Maverick.[5] The album received praise in Europe and the US, particularly for its politically conscious lyrics, but some within the queer community expressed disappointment that the album didn't include any songs that explicitly discussed same-sex attraction.[6] A proposed music video for the project would have included a lesbian love scene, but Maverick declined to finance the video, fearing commercial repercussions, and instead aimed to guide Ndegeocello into mainstream success, as with her John Mellencamp duet, "Wild Night".[6] Peace Beyond Passion, her second album, was released in 1996 and featured extensive focus on queer themes.[6] Ndegeocello wanted to record a jazz album for her next project, but after her label discouraged her, she instead recorded Bitter, an album drawing inspiration from acoustic jazz and artists like Bill Withers and Marvin Gaye.[6] The album drew acclaim from music critics, being named the best album of 1999 by multiple outlets, but sold poorly.[6]

Maverick regarded the album as a commercial failure, and executives from the label informed Ndegeocello that the album had underperformed because it wasn't a "black record."[7] Ndegeocello reflected in an interview with the Chicago Tribune that this comment "messes with (her) head," pointing out that "I wake up every day and I'm black".[7] For her Ndegeocello's next studio album, her fourth, Maverick urged her to emphasize her race, encouraging her to collaborate with a "who's who" of Black artists, although few responded to her requests for collaboration.[6] Ndegeocello drew inspiration from the mixtapes of her childhood, stating that she wanted to emulate that feeling with Cookie and aimed to create "a mix tape that I’m hoping people will share with their friends".[1] She initially planned to produce the album herself but ultimately enlisted Allen Cato, her guitarist, as a co-producer.[8] She began recording the album with her five-piece band, the Conscientious Objectors, in June 2001; the recording process took about a month.[1][9] They recorded at Hyde Street Studios in San Francisco's Tenderloin District.[1][8] Ndegeocello commented that the neighborhood would become "the vibe of" Cookie.[8]

Composition edit

Style and themes edit

"These words are me... I only wrote what I felt about people and music I love. It's the world through my eyes; a chapter in my memoirs. Perhaps others will also feel what I'm feeling."

Ndegeocello, "Me'Shell Ndegeocello Returns With 'Anthropological Mix'", Billboard, May 11, 2002[8]

The album incorporates elements of jazz, go-go, rap, funk, and soul.[2][3][4] Ndegeocello told KCRW in an interview that she regards Cookie as an R&B album and as more easily classified than Bitter.[10] It was regarded as a departure from her previous studio album and a return to the style of Plantation Lullabies, with less confessional lyrics but with more "audaci(ous)" arrangements and "dark" lyrics.[11][12][13] Wired argued that the album contrasted with her two "progressively mellow" previous albums, and that on Cookie she was "back with an attitude".[14] In Out, Barry Walters wrote that the album incorporated elements of both Plantation Lullabies and Bitter, combining the former's "confrontational social commentary" and the latter's "hushed pillow talk".[15] A review in Orlando Weekly noted that the album's political themes are reminiscent of her first two albums, but than in comparison to them, Cookie mostly "explores the political inside the personal".[16] Ndegeocello told the Chicago Tribune that revolution was a recurring theme on the album, elaborating that to her, the word refers to "how things evolve. Angela Davis, to me, was one of the original hip-hop MCs, this cycle of people who tried to infiltrate the culture and give another view."[7] She added that the album's title is inspired by the idea of musicians being "spiritual anthropologists who tap into the spirit of the time. It's not about, 'Let's get some guns and take over!'"[7] The album's lyrical themes include criticisms of homophobia, violence, religion, and commercialism.[17][8]

Tracks 1–6 edit

 
"Hot Night", the second track on Cookie, extensively samples a 1997 speech by activist Angela Davis.

The first two tracks, "Dead Nigga Blvd., Pt. 1" and "Hot Night", were described in a PopMatters review as displaying "Ndegeocello's politics at their most virulent."[18] "Dead Nigga Blvd., Pt. 1", a bass-heavy funk song, criticizes both the government, for not caring about Black America, and Black Americans who "don't take responsibility for themselves", according to Orlando Weekly.[16] The track further condemns cities for naming streets after civil rights icons while failing to improve residents' living conditions.[19][20] Ndegeocello also considers the definition of "freedom", singing that "perhaps to be free is to love all of those who hate me and die a beautiful death and make pretty brown babies".[18] The song ends with a sample of the Dick Gregory speech Human Rights & Property Rights.[18] PopMatters described it as a "caricature of the hip-hop generation", while Ndegeocello cited Master P as an influence on the song.[18]

"Hot Night", which Blender classified as a "protest rap song", features a rap verse by Kweli, as well samples of civil rights activist Angela Davis's 1997 The Prison-Industrial Complex speech and Puerto Rican salsa singer Héctor Lavoe's song "La Fama".[21][18][22][2] The early work of A Tribe Called Quest inspired the song.[1] Its concept centers on a hot summer night during which friends discuss revolutionary politics.[22][18] The song opens with Davis discussing her membership in the Communist Party and closes with her comments on the United States' welfare state and poverty.[22][18] Its chorus includes the lines "it's a hot night/let’s talk about the sign o' the times/politics in the fight of a revolutionary soul singer", with the second line being interpreted as a Prince reference.[18] In an interview with The Michigan Daily, she elaborated that in the context of the song, "revolutionary" means "revolving", pointing to Aretha Franklin and Roberta Flack as examples.[23] Ndegeocello also criticizes materialism in hip-hop culture and discusses the revolutionary power of lyrics.[24] During the bridge, Ndegeocello repeats that "it's a shame the way that we all run around blind to the facts" atop a bass that simulates the sound of a time bomb explosion.[24]

The songs "Priorities 1-6", "Pocketbook", and "Berry Farms" discuss same-sex attraction.[25] "Priorities 1-6" was described by Vibe music critic Ayana Byrd as "a love song devoid of ego." Its chorus consists of the lyrics "I just wanna talk and get to know you/Before I touch you and learn to love you."[21] Ndegeocello's titular priorities consist of "gaudy jewelry; sneakers made for $1.08 but bought for $150; wasted weed, wasted high; the belief we are legendary underworld figures being chased; sex like in the movies; and a mate to pay bills, bills, and automobills."[20] The song criticizes materialism and was interpreted as a response to Destiny's Child's 1999 single "Bills, Bills, Bills".[11][26] In "Pocketbook", Ndegeocello expresses her desire for a woman, observing her appearance and movement in a tone typical of male rappers.[27] "Berry Farms" (sometimes spelled "Barry Farms"[28][29]), a G-funk-influenced go-go song which Lewis called "the most explicitly homoerotic track" on the album, is directed to a straight-presenting woman who sexually experiments with Ndegeocello.[30][31][16] It has been interpreted as a sequel to "Pocketbook".[30][31][32] Ndegeocello asks "Can you love me without shame?" and speculates that her girlfriend keeps their relationship private because she fears scorn and enjoys "the material things" her boyfriend buys her.[25] The title has been interpreted both as a reference to the slang "bush" (as berries grow on bushes) and as a nod to the name of an Anacostia, District of Columbia, public housing project.[18][29] The piano and bass-centered ballad "Trust" features former Soul II Soul vocalist Caron Wheeler, with a brief interlude of "lushly orchestrated jazz".[11] Writing for Billboard, Michael Paoletta compared the song to Prince's "Do Me, Baby".[33]

Tracks 7–16 edit

Many of the songs incorporate samples of speeches and poems.[18] The beat of "Akel Dama" is the sound of a beating heart.[12] The song opens with a sample of the Gil Scott-Heron speech Comment #1, in which he examines the perception that queerness isn't compatible with blackness.[18] The song later samples the Countee Cullen poem Heritage, then The Idea of Ancestry, a poem by Etheridge Knight about the pictures taped to the wall of his jail cell.[18] "Earth", which contains the lyrics "Let me be the rain you thirst for/Let me be the sun you adore... You're my Earth, my paradise" and "let my sweet, sweet ocean caress your shore", drew comparison to Stevie Wonder.[12][33][34] Its chorus includes harmonica, bass guitar, and percussion.[35] Wheeler and Lalah Hathaway provide guest vocals on the track.[20] "Better By the Pound", a slowed-down cover of the Funkadelic song, has been described as "swaggering".[36][37][38] "Criterion", which features a jazz section, was one of the only songs on the record where all the musicians played together, rather than recording individual tracks.[1] In "God.Fear.Money", a commentary on society's ideals and ethics, Ndegeocello remarks that "I was way down for the revolution, till I found it was contingent upon some corporate sponsorship".[7][12] The song also describes a world where Jesus is thrown in jail while the Devil is featured on Total Request Live.[34] "Jabril", which "pleads for togetherness", is dedicated to Tupac and The Notorious B.I.G., but Ndegeocello announces her refusal to celebrate them for glamorizing violence in their lyrics.[12][19] In the song, the narrator "ruminates on her imminent death by gunshot".[31]

"Dead Nigga Blvd., Pt. 2" samples the 1999 HBO special Thug Life in DC and features a guitar solo by Michael Hampton.[18] It opens with the line "You can gain the world and lose your soul worrying about what you ain’t got".[18] The song was considered to continue the "plaintive and thoughtful" lyrics of Part One, while contrasting with the first part by giving voice to the "hip-hop generation" rather than critiquing them.[18] "6 Legged Griot (Weariness)" includes samples of Knight, Claude McKay's poem If We Must Die, and June Jordan's In Memoriam: Martin Luther King Jr.[18] The song arranges samples of their respective works into a conversation, accompanied by Ndegeocello's bass and a saxophone solo by Jacques Schwarz-Bart.[18] Closing out the album is a sped-up remix of "Pocketbook" which features remixing by Missy Elliott and Rockwilder, backing vocals by Tweet, and a rap verse by Redman.[39][40] It was added to the track listing almost a year after the rest of the album had been completed.[16] Ndegeocello stated that she selected Rockwilder to remix the track because he "could maintain the integrity of the music" while also making it sound like a new song.[1] The album's inclusion of the "radio-friendly" remix was described as "jarring", in contrast with the "explorative nature" of the rest of the record.[32]

Release and promotion edit

 
British musician Ben Watt remixed "Earth" for its single release.

The release of Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape was repeatedly delayed.[4][17][41] It was first set to be released in October 2001; however, following the September 11 attacks, the album was put on hold due to a lyric in "Hot Night" in which Ndegeocello sings that "we suffer in a world trade paradise".[17][42] On October 25, 2001, the Washington Post reported that the album's tentative title was Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape, and that it was due to be released "early next year".[43] The release date was pushed to February 12, 2002,[44] but the release date was delayed again, with the Chicago Reader reporting in December 2001 that the album would be released in March 2002.[11] The album's release date was eventually pushed to June 2002.[45][46] In addition to the album's delayed release, the label forced Ndegeocello to use a different album cover, deeming the initial one inappropriate in the aftermath of the attacks.[42] She stated that she wanted the lead single to be "Hot Night", but that her label would not allow it, given the world trade lyric.[23]

The album was officially released on June 4, 2002.[45] It was Ndegeocello's first album to display the simplified spelling of her last name, without an accent mark over the second "e".[41] To promote the album, Maverick ran print ads in magazines including Billboard, Vibe, and Out, highlighting critics' praise of the album and noting that the album features "Pocketbook", "Hot Night", and "Earth".[47][48][49] In further promotion of the record, Ebony hosted its inaugural Ebony Listening Lounge event, sponsored by Coca-Cola, for the album.[50] Ndegeocello told the Chicago Tribune that she anticipated it would attract fans online and bring people to her tours, rather than attaining success on radio.[7]

The album spawned two singles: "Pocketbook" and "Earth". The Rockwilder and Missy Elliott remix of "Pocketbook" was sent to urban radio during the week of April 8, 2002, and to crossover radio in June.[8][39][40] By May, it was in rotation on Philadelphia and New York City radio stations.[8] A music video, directed by Liz Friedlander, satirizes the music industry's promotion methods.[51][52] It depicts Ndegeocello as a DJ in front of a crowd of dancers, some of whom are girls in short shorts with signs reading "Buy my record".[51] PopMatters deemed it one of the best music videos of 2002, calling it the "Sharpest Bite of the Hand that Feeds You".[51] In the week ending June 9, the music video was added to the rotation on music video network MTV2.[53] The second single, "Earth", was released as a remix by former Everything but the Girl member Ben Watt. The remix entered the Billboard Dance Club Play chart (since renamed Dance Club Songs) at number 47 on the chart dated March 30, 2002.[54] Following its commercial release, it also entered the Dance Maxi-Single Sales chart at number 14 on the chart dated June 29.[55] The CD single included remixes of the track, as well as two B-sides: "Trust" and "The Teaching".[56] A dance remix was also sold digitally for 99 cents, a strategy which Billboard regarded as unusual.[57]

To further promote the album, Ndegeocello gave a series of concerts. Two days before the release of Cookie, on June 2, she performed a set at New York City's Bowery Ballroom, including songs from the forthcoming album.[34] On June 7, she performed at Irving Plaza in New York.[38] On October 24, she performed at Galaxy Theater in Santa Ana.[58] The following night, she performed at Los Angeles's Wiltern Theater, with R&B singer Mystic as her opening act.[59]

Reception edit

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic82/100[60]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [46]
Blender     [2]
Entertainment WeeklyA[61]
Los Angeles Times    [62]
Rolling Stone     [63]
Rolling Stone Album Guide     [64]
Slant Magazine     [65]
Spin8/10[36]
Vibe4/5[21]
The Village VoiceA−[66]

Upon its release, Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape received universal acclaim from music critics.[60] In the issue of Billboard dated June 8, 2002, the album was featured among the new release "Spotlights", with Paoletta writing that the album "crackles with intensity, be it of the sexual, political, or religious kind", and concluding that the album "offers huge rewards" to open minded listeners.[33] Austin Chronicle music critic Christopher Coletti, writing a joint review of new albums by P.Diddy, Eminem, Nelly, Wyclef Jean, Lauryn Hill, and Ndegeocello, regarded Cookie as the "most luscious" of the six records, writing that Ndegeocello "hits harder" than Hill.[67] The Christian Science Monitor, in an overview of female musicians' new albums, called Ndegeocello "a female Gil Scott-Heron" and praised her "masterly" fusion of different musical styles.[3] A review for The A.V. Club, written by Stephen Thompson, regarded the album as more ambitious and less consistent than Ndegeocello's previous records, but concluded that the missteps were worth it, because "her complex journey is a glorious destination in and of itself".[31] Thompson named "Berry Farms" the best track.[31] A review for Exclaim!, penned by Del F. Cowie, praised the production and background vocals, and although positing that Ndegeocello's fusion of soul and jazz caused "leaden pacing" in places, concluding that "the results are mesmerizing".[32] Entertainment Weekly critic Chimbo Tyehimba called Cookie "tasty" and considered it personal yet entertaining.[61] Richard Hilburn, writing for the Los Angeles Times, praised "Jabril", "Berry Farms", and "Trust", and opined that although "Earth" and "Better By the Pound" were weaker inclusions, the album would be her "fourth straight four-star collection" if it were 20 minutes shorter.[62]

Some critics were more mixed in their assessments of the album.[68] Blender, in a review by Kieran Scott, awarded the album three stars out of five, remarking that her music could sound "sleepy" because of her lack of "blaring hooks", but concluding that "her agile ambition tells an important tale about wisdom and dignity".[2] Dan Leroy, writing for Launch, questioned whether listeners, after 9/11, would welcome her samples of figures like Davis and her anti-capitalist messages, concluding that the album is best on songs like "Trust", which make "the political personal".[69] The following year, writing in LA Weekly, critic Ernest Hardy voiced disappointment in the album, praising her samples of speeches by Black activists but likening it to "Meshell for dummies" and arguing that the lyrics were too "obvious" and "clunky" compared to albums like Bitter and Comfort Woman (2003).[70] Washington Post critic Ta-Nehisi Coates praised "Hot Night" but called the album's midsection "a slow, droning soundtrack for an insomniac", opining that the album doesn't reflect the "energy and passion" of Ndegeocello's live performances.[71] Brian Carr, writing for The Dallas Morning News and Orlando Sentinel, called the album "energetic yet introspective" and noted that the samples "give props to the past but are set within fresh, contemporary grooves", but concluded that it was unlikely "to be a breakthrough disc".[72]

The album debuted at number 67 on the Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 17,000.[73] It thereby became her second appearance in the top 100 of that chart,[41] and her first since 1996, when her second album, Peace Beyond Passion, reached a peak of number 63.[74] The album also debuted and peaked at number 21 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, her fourth consecutive top 40 entry on that chart, and her highest-peaking since Peace Beyond Passion reached number 15.[75] It would remain Ndegeocello's last top 40 entry on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart until 2011, when her ninth studio album, Weather, reached number 37; it is also her last album top peak in the top 100 of the Billboard 200.[75] In 2007, critic John Murph reflected that the album "failed to have the commercial impact (Ndegeocello) hoped for", and regarded it as her last attempt "to break into the mainstream R&B scene".[76]

Accolades edit

 
Cookie was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary R&B Album, but lost to the debut album by Ashanti.

The album was also regarded as significant by critics and academics: Upon its release, some outlets described the record as one of the all-time best conscious hip-hop albums.[77] Mark Anthony Neal recognized it as "the first major pop recording that speaks to the era of 'newblackness'", referring to a term coined by Mama Soul.[78] At the end of 2002, music critic Robert Christgau ranked the album at number 76 on the Pazz & Jop 2002 Dean's List, while the Honolulu Star-Bulletin named the album one of the year's ten best albums, with critic Gary C.W. Chun praising its "earthy richness".[79][80]

At the 45th Annual Grammy Awards, held in 2003, Cookie was nominated for Best Contemporary R&B Album, the first year of the award's existence.[81] It marked Ndegeocello's third album to receive a Grammy nomination, after Plantation Lullabies and Peace Beyond Passion, and her seventh nomination overall.[82] Writing for the Los Angeles Times, Natalie Nichols predicted that Ashanti's eponymous debut album would win, but argued that Cookie deserved to, "not only for its sonic creativity but also for its racial, social and historical ruminations."[83] The San Francisco Chronicle predicted that Brandy's Full Moon would win, but likewise granted the "critics' pick" designation to Cookie.[84] For Slant, critic Sal Cinquemani predicted that Cookie, along with R&B duo Floetry's debut album, "might be too contemporary for academy voters", but concluded that while Ashanti's album would win, Cookie "should win".[85] Ashanti ultimately won the award.[86] The album was also nominated for Outstanding Music Album at the 14th GLAAD Media Awards, with the award eventually going to k.d. lang and Tony Bennett, for A Wonderful World.[87]

In 2010, Slant ranked Cookie at number 249 on their list of the best albums of the aughts. The Rockwilder remix of "Pocketbook" placed at number 229 on their list of the decade's best singles.[88] Village Voice critic Carol Cooper wrote in 2011 that Cookie was "arguably the smartest r&b album of the 2000s".[89] The next year, National Public Radio called the album "ludicrously underrated".[90]

Track listing edit

  1. "Dead Nigga Blvd., Pt. 1" (Meshell Ndegeocello, Allen Cato) – 3:03
  2. "Hot Night" (Supa Dave West, Ndegeocello, Talib Kweli, Héctor Lavoe) – 4:32
  3. "Interlude: Blah Blah Blah, Dyba Dyba Dyba" (Ndegeocello, Cato) – :40
  4. "Priorities 1-6" (Ndegeocello, Cato) – 3:43
  5. "Pocketbook" (Ndegeocello) – 4:00
  6. "Barry Farms" (Ndegeocello) – 5:20
  7. "Trust" (Ndegeocello) – 5:25
  8. "Akel Dama (Field of Blood)" (Ndegeocello, Michael Cain) – 7:27
  9. "Earth" (Ndegeocello, Cato) – 5:14
  10. "Better By the Pound" (George Clinton, Grace Cook) – 5:23
  11. "Criterion" (Ndegeocello) – 4:27
  12. "GOD.FEAR.MONEY" (Ndegeocello) – 3:31
  13. "Jabril" (Ndegeocello) – 6:06
  14. "Dead Nigga Blvd., Pt. 2" (Ndegeocello, Cato) – 3:13
  15. "Interlude: 6 Legged Griot Trio (Weariness)" (Ndegeocello) – 4:53
  16. "Pocketbook (Rockwilder and Missy Elliott Remix)" (Ndegeocello, Missy Elliott, Dana Stinson, Reggie Noble) – 3:59

Personnel edit

Musicians edit

Production edit

  • Produced by Allen Cato and Meshell Ndegeocello
  • "Hot Night" (#2) co-produced by Supa Dave West
  • "Pocketbook" remix (#16) produced by Rockwilder and Missy Elliott
  • Recorded by Eric Dyba and Allen Cato
  • Additional post production editing by Rail Jon Rogut
  • Mixed by Bob Power
  • Assisting and additional mixing by Andrew Brooks
  • Mastering by Tom Coyne
  • Art direction and design by Frank Maddocks
  • Photography by David Fenton
  • Kofi Taha – executive producer
  • A&R by Damu Mtume and Danny Strick

Charts edit

Weekly chart performance for Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape
Chart (2002) Peak
position
US Billboard 200[74] 67
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[75] 21

References edit

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  2. ^ a b c d e Scott, Kieran. . Blender. Archived from the original on October 2, 2002. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  3. ^ a b c Margolis, Lynn (October 25, 2002). "Rock on, sister". Christian Science Monitor. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  4. ^ a b c Crazy Horse, Kandia (April 30, 2002). "Walk on Gilded Splinters". Village Voice. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  5. ^ Goldin-Perschbacher 2013, p. 473.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Goldin-Perschbacher 2013, p. 474.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Kot, Greg (May 17, 2002). "Mixing and Matching". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g Paoletta, Michael (May 11, 2002). "Maverick's Ndegéocello Returns With 'Anthropological Mix'". Billboard. Vol. 114, no. 19. p. 11. Retrieved April 2, 2022.
  9. ^ Norment, Lynn (March 2002). "Sounding Off: The Best in Recorded Music". Ebony. 57 (5): 24. Retrieved December 14, 2021.
  10. ^ Harcourt, Nic (October 24, 2002). "Morning Becomes Ecletic: Meshell Ndegeocello". KCRW. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
  11. ^ a b c d Matos, Michaelangelo (December 6, 2001). "Meshell Ndegeocello". Chicago Reader. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  12. ^ a b c d e Fox, Kara (July 10, 2002). "Soul Salvation - Meshell Ndegeocello's 'Cookie: The Anthropological Mixtape'". Metro Weekly. Retrieved April 4, 2022.
  13. ^ Kernodle 2013, p. 200.
  14. ^ Day, Adrienne (February 1, 2002). "Music: Street Cred". Wired. Retrieved April 3, 2022.
  15. ^ Walters, Barry (March 2002). "OutFront Music Reviews: Meshell Ndegeocello". Out. 10 (9): 40. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
  16. ^ a b c d "Review - Cookie: the anthropological mixtape". Orlando Weekly. August 1, 2002. Retrieved December 17, 2023.
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  18. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Neal, Mark Anthony (May 15, 2002). "Revolutionary Soul Singa: Meshell Ndegeocello". PopMatters. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
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  22. ^ a b c "When Feminism Meets Music: Great Songs That Sample Radical Speech". Pitchfork. Conde Nast. October 18, 2017. Retrieved April 9, 2022.
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  26. ^ Lewis 2006, p. 124.
  27. ^ Clay 2008, p. 68–69.
  28. ^ Godfrey, Sarah (June 23, 2005). "Lips Sealed, Meshell Lets Spirit Take Over Show". Washington Post. Retrieved October 1, 2023.
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Sources edit

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External links edit

cookie, anthropological, mixtape, fourth, studio, album, american, soul, singer, rapper, meshell, ndegeocello, released, june, 2002, maverick, records, following, commercial, underperformance, third, studio, album, bitter, 1999, label, encouraged, return, earl. Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape is the fourth studio album by American soul singer and rapper Meshell Ndegeocello released on June 4 2002 by Maverick Records Following the commercial underperformance of her third studio album Bitter 1999 her label encouraged her to return to her earlier sound and record an album that sounded more black Ndegeocello collaborated with a number of prominent Black musicians including Talib Kweli Missy Elliott and Tweet as well as her backing band the Conscientious Objectors and recorded the album during the summer of 2001 The record which Ndegeocello modeled on the mixtapes of her childhood adopted a hip hop and R amp B influenced sound and political lyrics similar to that of her debut album Plantation Lullabies 1993 focusing on themes such as consumerism revolution religion and same sex attraction Throughout the album Ndegeocello also features samples of recorded speeches by Black activists poets and musicians such as Angela Davis Gil Scott Heron Countee Cullen and Etheridge Knight Cookie The Anthropological MixtapeStudio album by Meshell NdegeocelloReleasedJune 4 2002RecordedJune July 2001 1 StudioHyde Street Studios Tenderloin San Francisco 1 GenreR amp B hip hop funk jazz soul go go 1 2 3 4 Length59 06LabelMaverickProducerAllen Cato Meshell NdegeocelloMeshell Ndegeocello chronologyBitter 1999 Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape 2002 Comfort Woman 2003 Singles from Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Pocketbook Released April 8 2002 Earth Ben Watt Remix Released June 11 2002 The album was originally slated to come out in 2001 but its release was repeatedly delayed due to some lyrics regarded as related to the September 11 attacks Upon its release the album received universal acclaim from music critics who praised Ndegeocello s politically conscious lyrics as well as the assortment of musical styles Multiple critics ranked it one of the best albums of 2002 In 2003 the album was nominated for Best Contemporary R amp B Album at the 45th Annual Grammy Awards as well as a GLAAD Media Award The album entered the Billboard 200 and Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums charts at numbers 67 and 21 respectively and spawned two singles a remix of Pocketbook featuring Tweet and Redman and a remix of Earth which became a top 20 hit on the Dance Club Songs chart The album continues to be held in high regard by some critics Contents 1 Background 2 Composition 2 1 Style and themes 2 2 Tracks 1 6 2 3 Tracks 7 16 3 Release and promotion 4 Reception 4 1 Accolades 5 Track listing 6 Personnel 6 1 Musicians 6 2 Production 7 Charts 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksBackground editNdegeocello released her debut studio album Plantation Lullabies in 1993 on Maverick 5 The album received praise in Europe and the US particularly for its politically conscious lyrics but some within the queer community expressed disappointment that the album didn t include any songs that explicitly discussed same sex attraction 6 A proposed music video for the project would have included a lesbian love scene but Maverick declined to finance the video fearing commercial repercussions and instead aimed to guide Ndegeocello into mainstream success as with her John Mellencamp duet Wild Night 6 Peace Beyond Passion her second album was released in 1996 and featured extensive focus on queer themes 6 Ndegeocello wanted to record a jazz album for her next project but after her label discouraged her she instead recorded Bitter an album drawing inspiration from acoustic jazz and artists like Bill Withers and Marvin Gaye 6 The album drew acclaim from music critics being named the best album of 1999 by multiple outlets but sold poorly 6 Maverick regarded the album as a commercial failure and executives from the label informed Ndegeocello that the album had underperformed because it wasn t a black record 7 Ndegeocello reflected in an interview with the Chicago Tribune that this comment messes with her head pointing out that I wake up every day and I m black 7 For her Ndegeocello s next studio album her fourth Maverick urged her to emphasize her race encouraging her to collaborate with a who s who of Black artists although few responded to her requests for collaboration 6 Ndegeocello drew inspiration from the mixtapes of her childhood stating that she wanted to emulate that feeling with Cookie and aimed to create a mix tape that I m hoping people will share with their friends 1 She initially planned to produce the album herself but ultimately enlisted Allen Cato her guitarist as a co producer 8 She began recording the album with her five piece band the Conscientious Objectors in June 2001 the recording process took about a month 1 9 They recorded at Hyde Street Studios in San Francisco s Tenderloin District 1 8 Ndegeocello commented that the neighborhood would become the vibe of Cookie 8 Composition editStyle and themes edit These words are me I only wrote what I felt about people and music I love It s the world through my eyes a chapter in my memoirs Perhaps others will also feel what I m feeling Ndegeocello Me Shell Ndegeocello Returns With Anthropological Mix Billboard May 11 2002 8 The album incorporates elements of jazz go go rap funk and soul 2 3 4 Ndegeocello told KCRW in an interview that she regards Cookie as an R amp B album and as more easily classified than Bitter 10 It was regarded as a departure from her previous studio album and a return to the style of Plantation Lullabies with less confessional lyrics but with more audaci ous arrangements and dark lyrics 11 12 13 Wired argued that the album contrasted with her two progressively mellow previous albums and that on Cookie she was back with an attitude 14 In Out Barry Walters wrote that the album incorporated elements of both Plantation Lullabies and Bitter combining the former s confrontational social commentary and the latter s hushed pillow talk 15 A review in Orlando Weekly noted that the album s political themes are reminiscent of her first two albums but than in comparison to them Cookie mostly explores the political inside the personal 16 Ndegeocello told the Chicago Tribune that revolution was a recurring theme on the album elaborating that to her the word refers to how things evolve Angela Davis to me was one of the original hip hop MCs this cycle of people who tried to infiltrate the culture and give another view 7 She added that the album s title is inspired by the idea of musicians being spiritual anthropologists who tap into the spirit of the time It s not about Let s get some guns and take over 7 The album s lyrical themes include criticisms of homophobia violence religion and commercialism 17 8 Tracks 1 6 edit nbsp Hot Night the second track on Cookie extensively samples a 1997 speech by activist Angela Davis The first two tracks Dead Nigga Blvd Pt 1 and Hot Night were described in a PopMatters review as displaying Ndegeocello s politics at their most virulent 18 Dead Nigga Blvd Pt 1 a bass heavy funk song criticizes both the government for not caring about Black America and Black Americans who don t take responsibility for themselves according to Orlando Weekly 16 The track further condemns cities for naming streets after civil rights icons while failing to improve residents living conditions 19 20 Ndegeocello also considers the definition of freedom singing that perhaps to be free is to love all of those who hate me and die a beautiful death and make pretty brown babies 18 The song ends with a sample of the Dick Gregory speech Human Rights amp Property Rights 18 PopMatters described it as a caricature of the hip hop generation while Ndegeocello cited Master P as an influence on the song 18 Hot Night which Blender classified as a protest rap song features a rap verse by Kweli as well samples of civil rights activist Angela Davis s 1997 The Prison Industrial Complex speech and Puerto Rican salsa singer Hector Lavoe s song La Fama 21 18 22 2 The early work of A Tribe Called Quest inspired the song 1 Its concept centers on a hot summer night during which friends discuss revolutionary politics 22 18 The song opens with Davis discussing her membership in the Communist Party and closes with her comments on the United States welfare state and poverty 22 18 Its chorus includes the lines it s a hot night let s talk about the sign o the times politics in the fight of a revolutionary soul singer with the second line being interpreted as a Prince reference 18 In an interview with The Michigan Daily she elaborated that in the context of the song revolutionary means revolving pointing to Aretha Franklin and Roberta Flack as examples 23 Ndegeocello also criticizes materialism in hip hop culture and discusses the revolutionary power of lyrics 24 During the bridge Ndegeocello repeats that it s a shame the way that we all run around blind to the facts atop a bass that simulates the sound of a time bomb explosion 24 The songs Priorities 1 6 Pocketbook and Berry Farms discuss same sex attraction 25 Priorities 1 6 was described by Vibe music critic Ayana Byrd as a love song devoid of ego Its chorus consists of the lyrics I just wanna talk and get to know you Before I touch you and learn to love you 21 Ndegeocello s titular priorities consist of gaudy jewelry sneakers made for 1 08 but bought for 150 wasted weed wasted high the belief we are legendary underworld figures being chased sex like in the movies and a mate to pay bills bills and automobills 20 The song criticizes materialism and was interpreted as a response to Destiny s Child s 1999 single Bills Bills Bills 11 26 In Pocketbook Ndegeocello expresses her desire for a woman observing her appearance and movement in a tone typical of male rappers 27 Berry Farms sometimes spelled Barry Farms 28 29 a G funk influenced go go song which Lewis called the most explicitly homoerotic track on the album is directed to a straight presenting woman who sexually experiments with Ndegeocello 30 31 16 It has been interpreted as a sequel to Pocketbook 30 31 32 Ndegeocello asks Can you love me without shame and speculates that her girlfriend keeps their relationship private because she fears scorn and enjoys the material things her boyfriend buys her 25 The title has been interpreted both as a reference to the slang bush as berries grow on bushes and as a nod to the name of an Anacostia District of Columbia public housing project 18 29 The piano and bass centered ballad Trust features former Soul II Soul vocalist Caron Wheeler with a brief interlude of lushly orchestrated jazz 11 Writing for Billboard Michael Paoletta compared the song to Prince s Do Me Baby 33 Tracks 7 16 edit Many of the songs incorporate samples of speeches and poems 18 The beat of Akel Dama is the sound of a beating heart 12 The song opens with a sample of the Gil Scott Heron speech Comment 1 in which he examines the perception that queerness isn t compatible with blackness 18 The song later samples the Countee Cullen poem Heritage then The Idea of Ancestry a poem by Etheridge Knight about the pictures taped to the wall of his jail cell 18 Earth which contains the lyrics Let me be the rain you thirst for Let me be the sun you adore You re my Earth my paradise and let my sweet sweet ocean caress your shore drew comparison to Stevie Wonder 12 33 34 Its chorus includes harmonica bass guitar and percussion 35 Wheeler and Lalah Hathaway provide guest vocals on the track 20 Better By the Pound a slowed down cover of the Funkadelic song has been described as swaggering 36 37 38 Criterion which features a jazz section was one of the only songs on the record where all the musicians played together rather than recording individual tracks 1 In God Fear Money a commentary on society s ideals and ethics Ndegeocello remarks that I was way down for the revolution till I found it was contingent upon some corporate sponsorship 7 12 The song also describes a world where Jesus is thrown in jail while the Devil is featured on Total Request Live 34 Jabril which pleads for togetherness is dedicated to Tupac and The Notorious B I G but Ndegeocello announces her refusal to celebrate them for glamorizing violence in their lyrics 12 19 In the song the narrator ruminates on her imminent death by gunshot 31 Dead Nigga Blvd Pt 2 samples the 1999 HBO special Thug Life in DC and features a guitar solo by Michael Hampton 18 It opens with the line You can gain the world and lose your soul worrying about what you ain t got 18 The song was considered to continue the plaintive and thoughtful lyrics of Part One while contrasting with the first part by giving voice to the hip hop generation rather than critiquing them 18 6 Legged Griot Weariness includes samples of Knight Claude McKay s poem If We Must Die and June Jordan s In Memoriam Martin Luther King Jr 18 The song arranges samples of their respective works into a conversation accompanied by Ndegeocello s bass and a saxophone solo by Jacques Schwarz Bart 18 Closing out the album is a sped up remix of Pocketbook which features remixing by Missy Elliott and Rockwilder backing vocals by Tweet and a rap verse by Redman 39 40 It was added to the track listing almost a year after the rest of the album had been completed 16 Ndegeocello stated that she selected Rockwilder to remix the track because he could maintain the integrity of the music while also making it sound like a new song 1 The album s inclusion of the radio friendly remix was described as jarring in contrast with the explorative nature of the rest of the record 32 Release and promotion edit nbsp British musician Ben Watt remixed Earth for its single release The release of Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape was repeatedly delayed 4 17 41 It was first set to be released in October 2001 however following the September 11 attacks the album was put on hold due to a lyric in Hot Night in which Ndegeocello sings that we suffer in a world trade paradise 17 42 On October 25 2001 the Washington Post reported that the album s tentative title was Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape and that it was due to be released early next year 43 The release date was pushed to February 12 2002 44 but the release date was delayed again with the Chicago Reader reporting in December 2001 that the album would be released in March 2002 11 The album s release date was eventually pushed to June 2002 45 46 In addition to the album s delayed release the label forced Ndegeocello to use a different album cover deeming the initial one inappropriate in the aftermath of the attacks 42 She stated that she wanted the lead single to be Hot Night but that her label would not allow it given the world trade lyric 23 The album was officially released on June 4 2002 45 It was Ndegeocello s first album to display the simplified spelling of her last name without an accent mark over the second e 41 To promote the album Maverick ran print ads in magazines including Billboard Vibe and Out highlighting critics praise of the album and noting that the album features Pocketbook Hot Night and Earth 47 48 49 In further promotion of the record Ebony hosted its inaugural Ebony Listening Lounge event sponsored by Coca Cola for the album 50 Ndegeocello told the Chicago Tribune that she anticipated it would attract fans online and bring people to her tours rather than attaining success on radio 7 The album spawned two singles Pocketbook and Earth The Rockwilder and Missy Elliott remix of Pocketbook was sent to urban radio during the week of April 8 2002 and to crossover radio in June 8 39 40 By May it was in rotation on Philadelphia and New York City radio stations 8 A music video directed by Liz Friedlander satirizes the music industry s promotion methods 51 52 It depicts Ndegeocello as a DJ in front of a crowd of dancers some of whom are girls in short shorts with signs reading Buy my record 51 PopMatters deemed it one of the best music videos of 2002 calling it the Sharpest Bite of the Hand that Feeds You 51 In the week ending June 9 the music video was added to the rotation on music video network MTV2 53 The second single Earth was released as a remix by former Everything but the Girl member Ben Watt The remix entered the Billboard Dance Club Play chart since renamed Dance Club Songs at number 47 on the chart dated March 30 2002 54 Following its commercial release it also entered the Dance Maxi Single Sales chart at number 14 on the chart dated June 29 55 The CD single included remixes of the track as well as two B sides Trust and The Teaching 56 A dance remix was also sold digitally for 99 cents a strategy which Billboard regarded as unusual 57 To further promote the album Ndegeocello gave a series of concerts Two days before the release of Cookie on June 2 she performed a set at New York City s Bowery Ballroom including songs from the forthcoming album 34 On June 7 she performed at Irving Plaza in New York 38 On October 24 she performed at Galaxy Theater in Santa Ana 58 The following night she performed at Los Angeles s Wiltern Theater with R amp B singer Mystic as her opening act 59 Reception editProfessional ratingsAggregate scoresSourceRatingMetacritic82 100 60 Review scoresSourceRatingAllMusic nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 46 Blender nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 2 Entertainment WeeklyA 61 Los Angeles Times nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 62 Rolling Stone nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 63 Rolling Stone Album Guide nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 64 Slant Magazine nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 65 Spin8 10 36 Vibe4 5 21 The Village VoiceA 66 Upon its release Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape received universal acclaim from music critics 60 In the issue of Billboard dated June 8 2002 the album was featured among the new release Spotlights with Paoletta writing that the album crackles with intensity be it of the sexual political or religious kind and concluding that the album offers huge rewards to open minded listeners 33 Austin Chronicle music critic Christopher Coletti writing a joint review of new albums by P Diddy Eminem Nelly Wyclef Jean Lauryn Hill and Ndegeocello regarded Cookie as the most luscious of the six records writing that Ndegeocello hits harder than Hill 67 The Christian Science Monitor in an overview of female musicians new albums called Ndegeocello a female Gil Scott Heron and praised her masterly fusion of different musical styles 3 A review for The A V Club written by Stephen Thompson regarded the album as more ambitious and less consistent than Ndegeocello s previous records but concluded that the missteps were worth it because her complex journey is a glorious destination in and of itself 31 Thompson named Berry Farms the best track 31 A review for Exclaim penned by Del F Cowie praised the production and background vocals and although positing that Ndegeocello s fusion of soul and jazz caused leaden pacing in places concluding that the results are mesmerizing 32 Entertainment Weekly critic Chimbo Tyehimba called Cookie tasty and considered it personal yet entertaining 61 Richard Hilburn writing for the Los Angeles Times praised Jabril Berry Farms and Trust and opined that although Earth and Better By the Pound were weaker inclusions the album would be her fourth straight four star collection if it were 20 minutes shorter 62 Some critics were more mixed in their assessments of the album 68 Blender in a review by Kieran Scott awarded the album three stars out of five remarking that her music could sound sleepy because of her lack of blaring hooks but concluding that her agile ambition tells an important tale about wisdom and dignity 2 Dan Leroy writing for Launch questioned whether listeners after 9 11 would welcome her samples of figures like Davis and her anti capitalist messages concluding that the album is best on songs like Trust which make the political personal 69 The following year writing in LA Weekly critic Ernest Hardy voiced disappointment in the album praising her samples of speeches by Black activists but likening it to Meshell for dummies and arguing that the lyrics were too obvious and clunky compared to albums like Bitter and Comfort Woman 2003 70 Washington Post critic Ta Nehisi Coates praised Hot Night but called the album s midsection a slow droning soundtrack for an insomniac opining that the album doesn t reflect the energy and passion of Ndegeocello s live performances 71 Brian Carr writing for The Dallas Morning News and Orlando Sentinel called the album energetic yet introspective and noted that the samples give props to the past but are set within fresh contemporary grooves but concluded that it was unlikely to be a breakthrough disc 72 The album debuted at number 67 on the Billboard 200 with first week sales of 17 000 73 It thereby became her second appearance in the top 100 of that chart 41 and her first since 1996 when her second album Peace Beyond Passion reached a peak of number 63 74 The album also debuted and peaked at number 21 on the Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums chart her fourth consecutive top 40 entry on that chart and her highest peaking since Peace Beyond Passion reached number 15 75 It would remain Ndegeocello s last top 40 entry on the R amp B Hip Hop Albums chart until 2011 when her ninth studio album Weather reached number 37 it is also her last album top peak in the top 100 of the Billboard 200 75 In 2007 critic John Murph reflected that the album failed to have the commercial impact Ndegeocello hoped for and regarded it as her last attempt to break into the mainstream R amp B scene 76 Accolades edit nbsp Cookie was nominated for the Grammy Award for Best Contemporary R amp B Album but lost to the debut album by Ashanti The album was also regarded as significant by critics and academics Upon its release some outlets described the record as one of the all time best conscious hip hop albums 77 Mark Anthony Neal recognized it as the first major pop recording that speaks to the era of newblackness referring to a term coined by Mama Soul 78 At the end of 2002 music critic Robert Christgau ranked the album at number 76 on the Pazz amp Jop 2002 Dean s List while the Honolulu Star Bulletin named the album one of the year s ten best albums with critic Gary C W Chun praising its earthy richness 79 80 At the 45th Annual Grammy Awards held in 2003 Cookie was nominated for Best Contemporary R amp B Album the first year of the award s existence 81 It marked Ndegeocello s third album to receive a Grammy nomination after Plantation Lullabies and Peace Beyond Passion and her seventh nomination overall 82 Writing for the Los Angeles Times Natalie Nichols predicted that Ashanti s eponymous debut album would win but argued that Cookie deserved to not only for its sonic creativity but also for its racial social and historical ruminations 83 The San Francisco Chronicle predicted that Brandy s Full Moon would win but likewise granted the critics pick designation to Cookie 84 For Slant critic Sal Cinquemani predicted that Cookie along with R amp B duo Floetry s debut album might be too contemporary for academy voters but concluded that while Ashanti s album would win Cookie should win 85 Ashanti ultimately won the award 86 The album was also nominated for Outstanding Music Album at the 14th GLAAD Media Awards with the award eventually going to k d lang and Tony Bennett for A Wonderful World 87 In 2010 Slant ranked Cookie at number 249 on their list of the best albums of the aughts The Rockwilder remix of Pocketbook placed at number 229 on their list of the decade s best singles 88 Village Voice critic Carol Cooper wrote in 2011 that Cookie was arguably the smartest r amp b album of the 2000s 89 The next year National Public Radio called the album ludicrously underrated 90 Track listing edit Dead Nigga Blvd Pt 1 Meshell Ndegeocello Allen Cato 3 03 Hot Night Supa Dave West Ndegeocello Talib Kweli Hector Lavoe 4 32 Interlude Blah Blah Blah Dyba Dyba Dyba Ndegeocello Cato 40 Priorities 1 6 Ndegeocello Cato 3 43 Pocketbook Ndegeocello 4 00 Barry Farms Ndegeocello 5 20 Trust Ndegeocello 5 25 Akel Dama Field of Blood Ndegeocello Michael Cain 7 27 Earth Ndegeocello Cato 5 14 Better By the Pound George Clinton Grace Cook 5 23 Criterion Ndegeocello 4 27 GOD FEAR MONEY Ndegeocello 3 31 Jabril Ndegeocello 6 06 Dead Nigga Blvd Pt 2 Ndegeocello Cato 3 13 Interlude 6 Legged Griot Trio Weariness Ndegeocello 4 53 Pocketbook Rockwilder and Missy Elliott Remix Ndegeocello Missy Elliott Dana Stinson Reggie Noble 3 59Personnel editMusicians edit Meshell Ndegeocello vocals bass guitar additional instruments everything else Allen Cato guitar drum programming vocal arrangement 2 9 Federico Gonzalez Pena Rhodes electric piano 7 piano 9 13 15 Michael Cain piano 8 Gregoire Maret harmonica 9 13 Jacques Schwarz Bart tenor saxophone 10 11 13 15 Marcus Miller bass clarinet and fretless bass 13 Michael Hampton electric guitar 14 Oliver Gene Lake Jr drums 9 11 13 15 Kiggo Wellman drums 6 Sean Rickman drums 10 Alfredo Mojica percussion 7 9 11 13 Supa Dave West track programming 2 Talib Kweli rapper 2 Lalah Hathaway vocals 9 13 vocal arrangement 9 Caron Wheeler vocals 7 9 10 11 Redman rapper 16 Tweet vocals 16 Spoken words by Dick Gregory 1 Angela Davis 2 Gil Scott Heron 8 Countee Cullen 8 Etheridge Knight 8 15 Claude McKay 15 June Jordan 15 Production edit Produced by Allen Cato and Meshell Ndegeocello Hot Night 2 co produced by Supa Dave West Pocketbook remix 16 produced by Rockwilder and Missy Elliott Recorded by Eric Dyba and Allen Cato Additional post production editing by Rail Jon Rogut Mixed by Bob Power Assisting and additional mixing by Andrew Brooks Mastering by Tom Coyne Art direction and design by Frank Maddocks Photography by David Fenton Kofi Taha executive producer A amp R by Damu Mtume and Danny StrickCharts editWeekly chart performance for Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Chart 2002 Peakposition US Billboard 200 74 67 US Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard 75 21References edit a b c d e f g h i Walker Chris J August 1 2002 The Modern Soul of Meshell Ndegeocello Mix Future Retrieved April 9 2022 a b c d e Scott Kieran Me Shell NdegeOcello Cookie The Anthropological Mix Tape Blender Archived from the original on October 2 2002 Retrieved April 9 2022 a b c Margolis Lynn October 25 2002 Rock on sister Christian Science Monitor Retrieved April 9 2022 a b c Crazy Horse Kandia April 30 2002 Walk on Gilded Splinters Village Voice Retrieved April 9 2022 Goldin Perschbacher 2013 p 473 a b c d e f Goldin Perschbacher 2013 p 474 a b c d e f Kot Greg May 17 2002 Mixing and Matching Chicago Tribune Retrieved April 3 2022 a b c d e f g Paoletta Michael May 11 2002 Maverick s Ndegeocello Returns With Anthropological Mix Billboard Vol 114 no 19 p 11 Retrieved April 2 2022 Norment Lynn March 2002 Sounding Off The Best in Recorded Music Ebony 57 5 24 Retrieved December 14 2021 Harcourt Nic October 24 2002 Morning Becomes Ecletic Meshell Ndegeocello KCRW Retrieved August 1 2022 a b c d Matos Michaelangelo December 6 2001 Meshell Ndegeocello Chicago Reader Retrieved April 3 2022 a b c d e Fox Kara July 10 2002 Soul Salvation Meshell Ndegeocello s Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Metro Weekly Retrieved April 4 2022 Kernodle 2013 p 200 Day Adrienne February 1 2002 Music Street Cred Wired Retrieved April 3 2022 Walters Barry March 2002 OutFront Music Reviews Meshell Ndegeocello Out 10 9 40 Retrieved April 9 2022 a b c d Review Cookie the anthropological mixtape Orlando Weekly August 1 2002 Retrieved December 17 2023 a b c Goldin Perschbacher 2013 p 475 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Neal Mark Anthony May 15 2002 Revolutionary Soul Singa Meshell Ndegeocello PopMatters Retrieved April 9 2022 a b Conner Thomas May 8 2002 Back to Black Tulsa World Retrieved April 4 2022 a b c Campbell Bill September 26 2002 Meshell Ndegeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Ink19 Retrieved April 4 2022 a b c Byrd Ayana March 2002 Meshell Ndegeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mix Tape Vibe 10 3 172 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b c When Feminism Meets Music Great Songs That Sample Radical Speech Pitchfork Conde Nast October 18 2017 Retrieved April 9 2022 a b Thomas Devon April 9 2002 Me shell Ndegeocello speaks on life and times of Cookie in revealing interview Michigan Daily Retrieved April 14 2022 a b Lewis 2006 p 121 a b Lewis 2006 p 125 Lewis 2006 p 124 Clay 2008 p 68 69 Godfrey Sarah June 23 2005 Lips Sealed Meshell Lets Spirit Take Over Show Washington Post Retrieved October 1 2023 a b Moore Marcus J June 2 2014 Meshell Ndegeocello on Why D C Got Rid of Go Go Washington City Paper Retrieved October 1 2023 a b Lewis 2006 p 124 125 a b c d e Thompson Stephen June 17 2002 Meshell NdegeOcello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape AV Club Retrieved April 14 2022 a b c Cowie Del F July 1 2002 Me shell N dgeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Exclaim Retrieved April 14 2023 a b c Paoletta Michael June 8 2002 Reviews amp Previews Albums Billboard Vol 114 no 23 p 34 Retrieved April 3 2022 a b c Pareles Jon June 6 2002 Pop Review Funky Mystic Who Longs For Freedom Of All Kinds New York Times Archived from the original on May 27 2015 Retrieved April 14 2023 Lewis 2006 p 126 a b Green Tony March 2002 Meshell Ndegeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Joi Star Kitty s Revenge Spin 18 3 129 Retrieved October 15 2018 Flick 2002 p 67 a b Crazy Horse Kandia June 7 2022 Meshell Ndegeocello PopMatters Retrieved October 2 2023 a b In the Spotlight Meshell Ndegeocello Keeps Funk Alive with New CD Jet 102 3 65 July 15 2002 Retrieved December 14 2021 a b Aiese Eric June 15 2002 Taylor Chuck ed Reviews amp Previews Billboard Vol 114 no 24 p 24 Retrieved December 14 2021 a b c Kellman Andy Meshell Ndegeocello Biography AllMusic RhythmOne Retrieved December 17 2023 a b Thompson Marc Anthony April 1 2003 Meshell Ndegeocello by Marc Anthony Thompson Bomb Magazine Retrieved August 1 2022 Meyer Marianne October 25 2001 Live Washington Post Retrieved April 14 2023 Upcoming CMJ New Music Report 69 742 31 December 10 2001 Retrieved December 14 2002 a b Goodman Abbey June 3 2002 In Stores Now and Coming Soon Scooby Doo Soundtrack New Albums by Avril Lavigne Dirty Vegas DJ Quik amp More MTV Retrieved April 9 2022 a b O Neill Brian Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Meshell Ndegeocello AllMusic Retrieved October 15 2018 Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape In Stores Now Billboard ad Billboard Vol 114 no 22 June 1 2002 p 33 Retrieved December 14 2002 Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape by Meshell Ndegeocello In Stores Now Vibe ad Vibe 10 7 28 July 2002 Retrieved December 14 2002 Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape By Meshell Ndegeocello In Stores Now Out ad Out 11 1 70 July 2002 Retrieved December 14 2021 Ebony Listening Lounge Hosts CD Release Parties for Erykah Badu Jet 104 18 22 October 27 2003 Retrieved August 1 2022 a b c Fuchs Cynthia December 16 2002 Words Won t Bring Us Down Best Music Videos of 2002 PopMatters Retrieved April 3 2022 Wiltz Teresa June 19 2005 Meshell Ndegeocello Breaks Step With Pop Washington Post Retrieved December 17 2023 Billboard Video Monitor The Clip List Billboard Vol 114 no 25 June 22 2002 p 64 Retrieved December 14 2021 Hot Dance Music Club Play Billboard Vol 114 no 13 March 30 2002 p 32 Retrieved December 14 2021 Maxi Singles Sales Billboard Vol 114 no 26 June 30 2002 p 40 Retrieved December 14 2021 Earth Trust The Teaching CD 12 AllMusic RhythmOne Retrieved April 10 2022 Garrity Brian June 1 2002 Sites Sounds Billboard Vol 114 no 22 p 64 Retrieved August 1 2022 Lecaro Lina October 24 2002 Head Heart and Soul Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 2 2023 Jackson Gary October 29 2002 Music Reviews MeShell Ndegeocello Variety Retrieved October 1 2023 a b Reviews for Cookie The Anthropological Mix Tape by Me Shell Ndegeocello Metacritic Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Tyehimba Cheo June 7 2002 Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Entertainment Weekly Archived from the original on June 16 2018 Retrieved October 15 2018 a b Hilburn Robert June 2 2002 Up Against a Wall of Sorrows Los Lobos Seeks Their Roots Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 1 2023 Berger Arion June 20 2002 Me Shell Ndegeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Rolling Stone Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved October 15 2018 Himes Geoff 2004 Hoard Christian David Brackett Nathan eds Meshell Ndegeocello New York Simon amp Schuster p 571 ISBN 9780743201698 Retrieved April 3 2022 Cinquemani Sal June 1 2002 Meshell Ndegeocello Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Slant Magazine Retrieved October 15 2018 Christgau Robert September 3 2002 A Very Good Year The Village Voice Retrieved October 15 2018 Coletti Christopher July 19 2002 P Diddy Eminem Nelly Wyclef Jean Lauryn Hill and MeShell Ndegeocello Austin Chronicle Retrieved April 4 2022 Mixed Critic Reviews of Cookie MetaCritic CBS Interactive Retrieved April 9 2022 Leroy Dan June 10 2002 Album Review Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Launch Yahoo Entertainment Archived from the original on October 22 2002 Retrieved April 9 2022 Hardy Ernest November 27 2003 Forgive Me Meshell LA Weekly Retrieved April 4 2022 Coates Ta Nehisi July 3 2002 Meshell Ndegeocello Lost in the Mixtape Washington Post Retrieved December 17 2023 Carr Brian June 7 2002 Wildly Mixed Cookie Orlando Sentinel Archived from the original on July 8 2021 Retrieved April 14 2023 Dansby Andrew June 12 2002 Eminem Makes It Three Rolling Stone Penske Media Retrieved April 9 2022 a b MeShell Ndegeocello Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Retrieved April 3 2022 a b c MeShell Ndegeocello Chart History Top R amp B Hip Hop Albums Billboard Retrieved April 3 2022 Murph John September 28 2007 Rage Against the Routine Washington City Paper Retrieved April 14 2023 Lewis 2006 p 112 Neal Mark Anthony 2014 Songs in the Key of Black Life A Rhythm and Blues Nation London Taylor amp Francis ISBN 9781135206796 Retrieved April 14 2022 Christgau Robert Pazz amp Jop 2002 Dean s List Robert Christgau Retrieved August 1 2022 Chun Gary C W January 3 2003 Eminem was definitely Pop Artist of the Year Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved August 1 2022 Flick Larry January 18 2003 New Acts in Spotlight as Grammy Nominees Billboard Vol 115 no 3 pp 1 88 Retrieved April 4 2022 Artist Me shell NdegeOcello Recording Academy Grammy Awards Retrieved April 4 2022 Nichols Natalie February 23 2003 Our Predictions by Genre Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 4 2022 2003 Grammy Ballot San Francisco Chronicle February 16 2003 Retrieved April 4 2022 Cinquemani Sal January 21 2003 Grammy 2003 Winner Predictions Slant Retrieved April 9 2022 2003 Grammy Award Winners New York Times February 25 2003 Retrieved April 4 2022 Gans Andrew April 8 2003 14th Annual GLAAD Media Award Winners Include The Goat and Zanna Don t Playbill Retrieved April 15 2023 Cinquemani Sal February 6 2010 MUSICRest of the Best of the Aughts Albums amp Singles 101 250 Slant Retrieved April 4 2022 Cooper Carol November 15 2011 Meshell Ndegeocello Gets Crafty On Weather Village Voice Retrieved August 1 2022 Thompson Stephen July 18 2012 Song Premiere Meshell Ndegeocello With Valerie June Be My Husband NPR Retrieved August 1 2022 Sources editClay Andreana 2008 Like an Old Soul Record Black Feminism Queer Sexuality and the Hip Hop Generation Meridians 8 1 53 73 doi 10 2979 MER 2008 8 1 53 JSTOR 40338911 S2CID 197656722 Retrieved April 4 2022 Flick Larry July 9 2002 Meshell lays it all out The Advocate 867 66 67 Retrieved April 3 2022 Goldin Perschbacher Shana October 2013 The World Has Made Me the Man of My Dreams Meshell Ndegeocello and the problem of Black female masculinity Popular Music 32 3 471 496 doi 10 1017 S0261143013000329 JSTOR 24736785 S2CID 154419020 Kernodle Tammy 2013 Diggin You Like Those Ol Soul Records Meshell Ndegeocello and the Expanding Definition of Funk in Postsoul America American Studies 52 4 181 204 doi 10 1353 ams 2013 0109 S2CID 143927603 Retrieved April 4 2022 Lewis Nghana Spring 2006 You Sell Your Soul like You Sell a Piece of Ass Rhythms of Black Female Sexuality and Subjectivity in MeShell Ndegeocello s Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape Black Music Research Journal 26 1 111 130 JSTOR 25433764 Retrieved April 3 2022 External links editCookie The Anthropological Mixtape at Metacritic nbsp Release history at Discogs Ndegeocello s website archived June 2 2002 by the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cookie The Anthropological Mixtape amp oldid 1221768823, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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