Rating:
Genre:
R&B
Release Date: 09/16/2003
The so-called "EP" that will make many
Erykah Badu skeptics wonder what's going on is actually 15 minutes longer than
What's Going On. Why would any musician want to call a recording of such length -- 50 minutes, to be precise -- an EP? The fact that
Worldwide Underground is being referred to as an EP makes it apparent that it isn't intended to be considered the
true follow-up to
Mama's Gun. You also find out throughout the course of the disc that the loose, spare arrangements aren't likely to generate a stream of tidy, four-minute Top Ten hits. As easy as the disc is to slide into, it's far and away the least commercial
R&B release of the year. Written, produced, and performed by
Freakquency -- a seemingly ad hoc group consisting of
Badu,
James Poyser,
Rashad "Ringo" Smith, and
R.C. Williams -- along with a revolving door of guests, the whole thing goes down more like a weekend jam session than an endlessly labored-over, polished project. For the most part, this is a good thing. Both
"Bump It" and
"I Want You" are over eight minutes in length, leaving plenty of space to establish relaxed atmospheres that are built on uncomplicated rhythms, twinkling keyboards, and vaporous textures.
"Back in the Day (Puff)" and
"Danger" are the two most single-oriented tracks; the former's essentially a more filled-out version of one of the extended pieces in miniature form, while the latter is the toughest sounding of the whole batch, with punchy, synthetic horn jabs and
Badu's most animated vocal. A new version of
"Love of My Life" caps off the disc in fine, fun style, with
Badu paying tribute to the all-female, old-school trio
Sequence, with the help of
Angie Stone,
Bahamadia, and
Queen Latifah. If
Worldwide Underground isn't to be taken as seriously as
Baduizm and
Mama's Gun, so be it; but it only goes to show how apprehensive the powers that be are in allowing their platinum artists to deviate from what's expected.
~Andy Kellman, All Music Guide
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A reviewer
from Atlanta, GA
Awesome
i think this is by far her most artistically free album yet. i can play every track on this EP and I can actually feel the fun of the tracks projected through the music. The ending beats add a funky psychedelic vibe to the disc. Over all, I thought Erykah was really able to show a lot of her personal style in this EP and that's another reason i like it soo much. You can tell she's doing her own thing and it sounds both soulful and free.