I Love You

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I Love You album cover
Album Information
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 33:38

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Amelia Raitt

eMusic Contributor

Amelia Raitt is a former writer for the television program Mr. Belvedere and has been writing about pop music of all colors and stripes for eMusic since 2005. S...more »

08.04.09
Amanda Blank, I Love You
2009 | Label: Downtown Records

Rapping Philly chick Amanda made her name at the half-century mark running with Spank Rock as a sort of white, pottymouthed female foil. A Lil’ Kim for the hipster set. But something funny happened in the last few years: She started to sing, and sing pretty well. Now LI Love You is here and it’s a weirdly compelling album, hardly reliant on sex-you-up threats. “A Love Song” seamlessly weaves LL Cool J’s “I Need Love” and Santigold’s “I’m a Lady.” Not revolutionary by any means, but there are moments of greatness at a time when female MCs are at a premium.

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so good

mysterywhteboy

this is totally worth the listen. seeing her live is another experience. pure electricity.

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fantastic ride

EMUSIC-01DF8242

Amanda Blank rocks....I'm not normally into rap at all but her way of doing it is fantastic. the entire album is a nice and sexy ride all the way through to the end.

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Geez...

corenaf

Stop your goddamn smirking already.

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Mostly Forgettable

corcoranorama

Is Amanda Blank's over-sexed, Peaches-biting persona subversive or derivative? I can see a sort of g-string-feminist logic at work here but I think it largely fails to push any boundaries - it's been done before too many times. Most of these tracks are awful, but two stand out for me: 'Shame On Me' and 'Leaving You Behind' show that she is smarter than most of her songs imply. 'A Love Song' is catchy as well, but you can find a better version of it on Diplo's 'Top Ranking', where it's called "I'm A Lady' and blends into a rocking track called 'Posse On Broadway.'

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They Say All Music Guide

There’s little doubt that Amanda Blank is her own woman. A torrid rapper and inventive lyricist, she lit up the Baltimore club scene during 2005-2006, and her closing verse on Spank Rock’s “Bump” provided a highlight to one of the best albums of 2006, YoYoYoYoYo. With so much talent on display already, the only concern leading up to the release of I Love You was whether her jump from featured artist to top billing could avoid the usual wide-distribution pitfalls. Blank proves mostly up to the challenge, floating a few great tracks and plenty of pounding productions, despite sounding familiar to fans of M.I.A. or Santigold. The similarities begin with “A Love Song,” where it’s easy to see the roots of M.I.A.’s “Paper Planes,” which is just as reflective and just as reliant on an ’80s pop touchstone (here it’s LL Cool J’s “I Need Love” instead of “Straight to Hell” by the Clash) — and, not coincidentally, just as produced by Diplo and Switch. Elsewhere, she spends a lot of time jump-starting a party, recalling Santigold’s pop version of club music. The best tracks here feature her excellent rapping skills over productions from XXXChange, and the one where she sounds the most natural is the Spank Rock co-feature “Gimme What You Got.”) – John Bush

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