Hot & Wet

2003 studio album by 112 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hot & Wet is the fourth studio album by American R&B group 112. It was released by Bad Boy Records and Def Soul on December 9, 2003 in the United States. Their first album not exclusively associated with Bad Boy, signaling the groups' eventual departure from the label in 2004, Hot & Wet followed the band's 2001 album Part III. At the 2005 Soul Train Music Awards, the album was nomintated for Best R&B/Soul Album – Group, Band or Duo but lost to Destiny's Child's Destiny Fulfilled (2004).[1]

ReleasedDecember 9, 2003
Length70:03
Quick facts Studio album by 112, Released ...
Hot & Wet
An image of four black men wearing white tank tops and blue jeans standing in front of a blue background with the group's logo.
Studio album by
ReleasedDecember 9, 2003
Length70:03
Label
Producer
112 chronology
Part III
(2001)
Hot & Wet
(2003)
Pleasure & Pain
(2005)
Singles from Hot & Wet
  1. "Na Na Na Na"
    Released: July 22, 2003
  2. "Hot & Wet"
    Released: September 22, 2003
  3. "Right Here for U"
    Released: January 2, 2004
  4. "Give It to Me"
    Released: April 13, 2004
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Background

In 2002, the group members, having matured both personally and professionally, came to the realization that a split with the Bad Boy label was necessary due to the lack of interest.[2] In search of greater creative control, 112 left Bad Boy Records in February 2002 and signed with Def Jam in July on their Def Soul-imprint, insisting that the breakup was amicable. They reiterated this "no-hard-feelings" attitude by going to Daddy's House to record a debut album for Def Jam. Disagreements remained over ownership rights to the 112 catalog of songs, and this album – the Def Jam debut disc was waylaid as a result, while negotiations ensued between Lyor Cohen of Def Jam and Bad Boy owner Combs. With both sides ultimately in agreement, Hot & Wet would eventually appear in November 2003.[2]

Promotion

Hot & Wet's first single "Na Na Na Na" featuring dance hall legend Super Cat was released on July 22, 2003. It reached number 24 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[3] Second single "Hot & Wet" was released on September 22, 2003 and features rapper, Ludacris. It peaked at number 29 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart.[3] The album's third single "Right Here for U" charted at number 72 on the US Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart on January 2, 2004, but was released as a digital download only.[3] Fourth and final single "Give It to Me" was released on April 13, 2004.

Critical reception

More information Review scores, Source ...
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarHalf star[4]
BlenderStarStarStar[5]
Rolling StoneStarStar[6]
VibeStarStarStar[7]
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AllMusic editor Andy Kellman found that Hot & Wet offered "the same mixed bag of strong singles and inconsistent album cuts that fans have grown accustomed to since the 1996 debut [...] The overabundance of slow-tempo material weighs down the listen, which is especially problematic since the album is nearly 70 minutes in duration."[4] Jon Caramanica from Rolling Stone wrote that most of the "album moves at a snail's pace, though – an undifferentiated set of slooowww jams that suggest 112 are asleep at the wheel."[6] Laura Checkoway from Vibe found that "though Hot sizzles at times, lukewarm and robotically simple cuts dampen the party spirit [...] This crew’s at its best when it focuses on the bedrooms and dance floors. Yes, life has its blues, but with 112, we’ve come to expect nothing short of peaches and cream."[7]

Commercial performance

Hot & Wet debuted and peaked at number 22 on the US Billboard 200 in the week of December 6, 2003, with first week sales of 92,000 units.[8] It also opened and peaked at number four on the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[9] By March 2005, the album had sold 380,000 units in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan,[10] which was seen as a considerable decline compared to the 1.9-million selling release Part III (2001).[10] In 2005, Daron Jones commented on the album's commercial performance: "Hot & Wet wasn't a bad album. But the choice of singles helped make the album not as successful as it should have been, and some of the imaging was off."[10]

Track listing

More information No., Title ...
Hot & Wet track listing
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Medley" Stevie J2:32
2."It's Goin' Down 2Nite" (featuring T.I.)Jones4:42
3."Hot & Wet" (featuring Ludacris)
  • Combs
  • Stevie J
3:41
4."Unbelievable"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
  • Combs
Jones4:17
5."Everyday"
Saint Denson4:29
6."I Belong to You" (Interlude)
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones1:23
7."Right Here for U"
  • Combs
  • Stevie J
5:13
8."All My Love"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones4:41
9."You Said"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones4:16
10."Knock U Down" (Interlude)
  • Jason Boyd
  • Jordan
Stevie J1:46
11."Knock U Down"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
  • Jordan
Stevie J4:21
12."Hot & Wet" (Remix) (featuring Ludacris and Chingy)
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
  • Jordan
  • Combs
  • Bridges
  • Kenton Nix
  • Combs
  • Stevie J
4:15
13."Na Na Na Na" (featuring Super Cat)
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
  • William Maragh
Jones3:40
14."Give It to Me"
  • Dent
  • Spi
3:58
15."Slip Away"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones4:37
16."Say Yes"
Dre & Vidal4:01
17."Man's World"
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones5:03
Total length:70:03
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More information No., Title ...
Bonus track
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
18."Na Na Na Na" (Reggae Remix) (featuring Spragga Benz, Lady Saw, Buccaneer and Damian Marley)
  • Keith
  • Parker
  • Scandrick
  • Jones
Jones4:30
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Personnel

  • Chris Athens — mastering
  • Leesa Brunson — A&R assistance
  • Jonathan "Chronic Face" Burke — vocal engineer
  • Isaac Carree — vocals
  • Dru Castro — engineer
  • Da Twelveexecutive producer
  • Tina Davis — A&R
  • Vidal Davis — producer
  • Dent — multi instruments, producer
  • Stephen Dent — producer, engineer, instrumentation
  • Diddy — producer, executive producer
  • Emery Dobyns — engineer
  • Steve Fisher — assistant
  • Marcus T. Grant — executive producer
  • Andre Harris — producer
  • Stevie J. — producer, overdubs, compilation
  • Jahaun Johnson — A&R
  • Daron Jones — multi instruments, producer, instrumentation
  • Jonathan Jordan — engineer
  • Victoria Jordan — art direction
  • Terese Joseph — recording director
  • Jonathan Kaslow — A&R, artist coordination
  • Rich Keller — engineer, mixing
  • Daniel Levitt — photography
  • Paul Logus — engineer, mixing
  • Carlton Lynn — engineer
  • Manny Marroquin — mixing, vocal mixing
  • Vernon Mungo — engineer, mixing
  • Rob Paustian — engineer, mixing
  • Tara Podolsky — A&R
  • Saint Denson — producer
  • Keith Slattery — engineer
  • Spi — multi instruments, producer, instrumentation
  • Brian Stanley — engineer
  • Christopher Stern — creative director
  • Rabeka Tuinei — assistant
  • Kevin Wales — producer
  • Eric Weissman — sample clearance

Charts

More information Chart (2004), Peak position ...
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Release history

More information Region, Date ...
Release history for Hot & Wet
Region Date Format(s) Label(s)
United States December 9, 2003
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References

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