Here Comes the Fuzz explained

Here Comes the Fuzz
Type:studio
Artist:Mark Ronson
Cover:Mark Ronson - Here Comes the Fuzz.png
Released:8 September 2003
Genre:Hip hop
Length:39:24
Label:Elektra
Producer:Mark Ronson
Next Title:Version
Next Year:2007

Here Comes the Fuzz is the debut studio album by British-American producer Mark Ronson. The album was released on 8 September 2003, led by the lead single, "Ooh Wee". Unlike Ronson's later releases his debut album focuses more on the genre of hip hop music with guest appearances from a number of famous rappers and hip hop alumni including Ghostface Killah, M.O.P., Nate Dogg, Saigon, Q-Tip, Sean Paul and Mos Def. The album also features appearances from singers Rivers Cuomo, Jack White and Daniel Merriweather whose commercial breakthrough came with this album.

The album did not perform well chart wise, only peaking at No. 70 in Ronson's home territory, however it did sell more than 18,000 copies in the US.[1] Ronson later addressed the failure of the album, often by joking that "only 12 people bought it." The album has sold 92,676 copies in the UK as of January 2015.[2]

Recording

The song "International Affair" was originally released on Sean Paul's 2002 album Dutty Rock, and featured vocals from Debi Nova instead of Tweet. Nova contributes vocals to the album track "Tomorrow". Rolling Stone predicted the album would stop the critical ill-will towards Ronson, saying Ronson "serves up a grab bag of pumping beats."[3] Entertainment Weekly gave the album a C, saying "the collection's overall disco-licious come-together vibe is cloying and insubstantial."[4] The popularity of the album grew following the release of the follow-up album Version in 2007, which saw Ronson collaborate with a number of well-known British and American artists on covers of well-known songs.

Singles

Track listing

Chart performance

Chart (2003)! scope="col"
Peak
position
UK Albums Chart[5] 70
US Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums[6] 84

Release history

Country! scope="col"
DateLabelFormat(s)
United Kingdom8 September 2003Elektra
United States

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Mark Ronson Shows Off His 'Record Collection' on New Album. Billboard.com. 2011-01-26.
  2. News: Official Charts Analysis: Ronson first artist to top singles and albums charts since 2013. Jones. Alan. 26 January 2015. Music Week. Intent Media. 7 November 2015. subscription .
  3. Diehl, Matt (4 September 2003), "Mark Ronson: Here Comes the Fuzz". Rolling Stone. (930):142
  4. Drumming, Neil (12 September 2003), "MARK RONSON". Entertainment Weekly. (727/728):152
  5. Web site: Mark Ronson – Here Comes The Fuzz . aCharts.us . 8 March 2010 .
  6. Web site: [{{BillboardURLbyName|artist=mark ronson|chart=all}} Here Comes The Fuzz – Mark Ronson (2003) ]. Billboard.com . 8 March 2010 .