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Federline's album debuted in the [[Billboard 200]] at #151, with first-week sales reported at about 6,500. According to SoundScan numbers, ''Playing with Fire'' was the 16th highest debut out of 19 albums released that week that made the Billboard 200.<ref>[http://www.vh1.com/news/articles/1545217/20061108/federline_kevin.jhtml?headlines=true 'Hannah Montana' Holds Billboard #1; K-Fed's Tough Week Continues | News | VH1.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In its second week, it dropped out of the chart, selling a mere 1,500 copies.<ref>[http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1545837/11152006/fergie__4_.jhtml VH1.com : Fergie : Justin, Christina, Fergie Take Now 23 To The Top - Rhapsody Music Downloads<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The review-tallying website [[Metacritic.com]] summarized the reviews they cited as possessing "extreme dislike or disgust"; as of 2009 it was the lowest-rated album in their database.<ref name="Meta">metacritic.com, [http://www.metacritic.com/music/artists/federlinekevin/playingwithfire?q=Kevin%20Federline Playing with Fire entry], accessed February 12, 2007 </ref>
Federline's album debuted in the [[Billboard 200]] at #151, with first-week sales reported at about 6,500. According to SoundScan numbers, ''Playing with Fire'' was the 16th highest debut out of 19 albums released that week that made the Billboard 200.<ref>[http://www.vh1.com/news/articles/1545217/20061108/federline_kevin.jhtml?headlines=true 'Hannah Montana' Holds Billboard #1; K-Fed's Tough Week Continues | News | VH1.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> In its second week, it dropped out of the chart, selling a mere 1,500 copies.<ref>[http://www.vh1.com/artists/news/1545837/11152006/fergie__4_.jhtml VH1.com : Fergie : Justin, Christina, Fergie Take Now 23 To The Top - Rhapsody Music Downloads<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> The review-tallying website [[Metacritic.com]] summarized the reviews they cited as possessing "extreme dislike or disgust"; as of 2009 it was the lowest-rated album in their database.<ref name="Meta">metacritic.com, [http://www.metacritic.com/music/artists/federlinekevin/playingwithfire?q=Kevin%20Federline Playing with Fire entry], accessed February 12, 2007 </ref>


According to ''Ask Billboard'', ''Playing with Fire'' had sold 16,000 copies as of [[22 January]] [[2007]].<ref>Caulfield, Kevin. [http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/ask_bb/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003534638 Ask Billboard]. January 22, 2007. Accessed 07 Feb 2007.</ref> Since then, stores stopped receiving shipments of the album and no more copies were being made.
According to ''Ask Billboard'', ''Playing with Fire'' had sold 16 copies as of [[22 January]] [[2007]].<ref>Caulfield, Kevin. [http://www.billboard.com/bbcom/ask_bb/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1003534638 Ask Billboard]. January 22, 2007. Accessed 07 Feb 2007.</ref> Since then, stores stopped receiving shipments of the album and no more copies were being made.


==Reception==
==Reception==

Revision as of 01:35, 17 September 2009

Untitled

Playing with Fire was the debut studio album from American personality and rapper Kevin Federline, released on October 31, 2006 in North America, and on November 6th in the UK. The lyrics were all co-written by Federline.

Federline's album debuted in the Billboard 200 at #151, with first-week sales reported at about 6,500. According to SoundScan numbers, Playing with Fire was the 16th highest debut out of 19 albums released that week that made the Billboard 200.[1] In its second week, it dropped out of the chart, selling a mere 1,500 copies.[2] The review-tallying website Metacritic.com summarized the reviews they cited as possessing "extreme dislike or disgust"; as of 2009 it was the lowest-rated album in their database.[3]

According to Ask Billboard, Playing with Fire had sold 16 copies as of 22 January 2007.[4] Since then, stores stopped receiving shipments of the album and no more copies were being made.

Reception

Before the album release, Federline's closing performance of "Lose Control" with an introduction by then-wife Britney Spears was the highlight of the 2006 Teen Choice Awards. The audience gave the performance a standing ovation before and during the ending credits.

Critical reviews of Federline's debut album were near-unanimously negative. Between Metacritic's founding in 1999 and the album's release, no album had scored below 20, partially because many critics have a minimum 1 of 5 score, which is translated to 20 out of 100 in Metacritic. "Playing with Fire" scored 15, receiving an F from Entertainment Weekly, which translated into a 0/100. "Playing with Fire" is also ranked #1 on Metacritic's 100 worst-reviewed albums.[5]

One notable exception to the almost universal derision was Ron Harris of the Associated Press, who enthused: “All jokes aside about his climb to fame, Kevin Federline’s album Playing With Fire (Federline Records) is a credible, entertaining debut. I kid you not.... The streets of Fresno County are no joke, and good for Fed-Rock if wants [sic] to boast about surviving that life.”[6] http://www.metacritic.com/music/bests/</ref>

However, Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Senior Editor of Allmusic (AMG) was less charitable: “Federline's debut album, Playing with Fire, is indeed bad, but it's bad in an uninteresting way; it's as dull and predictable as its title... he's not nearly as shocking as he'd like to believe or as amusing as his haters would hope: he just comes across as a big boob... It's also a bore because he's a boor, writing endlessly about the same three topics: his alleged superstardom, his hatred of the media, his love of parties and dope... it often sounds like he can't quite understand them."[7]

Similarly, Preston Jones of Slant Magazine echoed, "Federline can only rap about weed, his bank account, his wife, fighting anyone who looks at him sideways, and partying 'til three days from now —- roughly in that order... An oh-so-tiny sliver of myself kind of wanted Playing With Fire to be less aggressively shitty than it is, if only so the restless, rapacious media would ease off this tattered target of its ire—unfortunately, this disc is just as disposable and dumb as you'd expect."[8] Kevin O'Donnell of Rolling Stone called it "reprehensible" and a "tragicomedy";[9] while Chris Willman in Entertainment Weekly proclaimed that it was "a concept album about squandering Britney Spears' fortune."[10]

The "Playing with Fire" concert tour was also a commercial disaster. In New York City, Federline performed before an estimated audience of 300 out of a total seating capacity of 1,500 at Webster Hall, with only one-third of attendees remaining by the end of the concert. Although many of the tickets were given away for free, approximately three-quarters of the seats at his Chicago performance remained empty.[11] Four of the eight scheduled tour performances (Cleveland, Atlantic City, Anaheim, and San Diego) were ultimately cancelled.[12][13]

Coincidentally, while performing in WWE, Federline used the song "America's Most Hated" as his entrance music. Also while feuding with John Cena, he said that his new album would surpass Cena's record sales; Cena's album sold 43,000 copies in its first week in stores,[14] more than 6.5 times what Playing with Fire had sold to that time.

Track Listing

  1. "Intro"
  2. "The World is Mine"
  3. "America's Most Hated"
  4. "Snap"
  5. "Lose Control"
  6. "Dance With A Pimp" (featuring Ya Boy)
  7. "Privilege" (featuring Bosko)
  8. "Crazy" (featuring Britney Spears)
  9. "A League of My Own"
  10. "Playing with Fire"
  11. "Caught Up" (Skit)
  12. "Caught Up"
  13. "Kept on Talkin'" / "Middle Finger" [Hidden Track]

Samples/Interpolations

America's Most Hated

Cancelled tracks

  • "PopoZão"
  • Untitled track with Petey Pablo
  • "Y'all Ain't Ready"
  • "U Should" (featuring Ya Boy and Phat Rat)
  • "Keep Messing with My Family"
  • "Untold Stories"
  • "Rockstar" (Ya Boy featuring K-Fed)
  • "Down South" [15]

Technical credits

Chart performance

Charts

Chart (2006) Peak
position
U.S. Billboard 200 151
U.S. Top Heatseekers 2

References

  1. ^ 'Hannah Montana' Holds Billboard #1; K-Fed's Tough Week Continues | News | VH1.com
  2. ^ VH1.com : Fergie : Justin, Christina, Fergie Take Now 23 To The Top - Rhapsody Music Downloads
  3. ^ metacritic.com, Playing with Fire entry, accessed February 12, 2007
  4. ^ Caulfield, Kevin. Ask Billboard. January 22, 2007. Accessed 07 Feb 2007.
  5. ^ http://www.metacritic.com/music/bests/
  6. ^ Surprise! K-Fed's debut CD not all that bad - RAP/HIP-HOP MUSIC - MSNBC.com
  7. ^ AllMusic.com review
  8. ^ Slant Magazine - Music Review: Kevin Federline: Playing With Fire
  9. ^ Playing With Fire : Kevin Federline : Review : Rolling Stone
  10. ^ Playing with Fire (Music - Kevin Federline) | Music Review | Entertainment Weekly
  11. ^ Desperate K-Fed Can't Give It Away - TMZ.com - Entertainment News, Celebrity Gossip and Hollywood Rumors
  12. ^ All Federline Shows Canceled Due to Poor Ticket Sales
  13. ^ Liner Notes: Get out, rock out
  14. ^ Whitmire, Margo. "DMB Defeats NIN, Weezer As Album Chart Champ". Retrieved 2007-09-01.
  15. ^ Kevin Federline: The Luckiest Man Alive