Talk:It Was Written

Untitled
Amount sold: These two statements appear to contradict each other: "On September 9, 1996, It Was Written was certified double platinum in sales by the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), following sales in excess of two million copies in the United States.[28] On January 8, 1997, "Street Dreams" was certified gold in sales by the RIAA, following sales in excess of 500,000 copies.[29]". How could it be certified Gold months after it went Platinum? One of these is wrong but both of these are in the article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 94.192.241.249 (talk) 19:27, 9 February 2010 (UTC)

Don't you hate how people follow other people's opinions?
Once the word gets out on an album it's like everyone just follows along with the review. It Was Written got a bad wrap because it was not like Illmatic, but this does not mean the album sucks in any way. Most of the reviews I've read on this album shitcanned it and gave it very undeserving comments. If you listen closely to this album with songs like The Message, I Gave You Power, Watch Dem Niggas, Take it in Blood, Nas is Coming (excluding the annoying chorus), Affirmative Action, The Set Up, Suspect, Shootouts, Live Nigga Rap and If I Ruled The World, how the Hell can someone honestly think they're wack with their great productions and excellent lyrics/flows? This has to be the absolute most underrated album of all time along with Onyx's "All We Got Iz Us". I'll go so far as to not only say that it's a great album, but I'll even say it's Nas' best. Disagree all you'd like. -Tainted Drifter

Everyone's welcome to their own opinions & preferences. Most peeps prefer Illmatic because of how fresh it was, as well as its varied production and content as opposed to the dark Mafioso-style that Nas adopted for It Was Written. Personally, I prefer Illmatic, God's Son, Stillmatic, and The Lost Tapes to It Was Written. I even prefer the Living Legends mixtape, although it used plenty of verses from Nas' second album. I don't dislike the album at all, and it's still one of my favourite of all time. I just feel that Nas has done a lot better.

- Mittens

Yeah, "everyone's entitled to their own opinion" is a saying created to defend those with horrible opinions. Lucky for you, it was created.--Tainted Drifter (talk) 03:25, 3 July 2008 (UTC)

and on the subject of opinion, the last sentence of the second prargraph... . "It Was Written also received mixed criticism for not being on-par with Illmatic, serving as an example of the sophomore slump." is judgemental and inacurate in that bad reviews (or mixed critisism) doesnt serve of an example of anything and the rhetoric gives the impression that the opinion "sophomore slump" is justified something that being "The album proved to be Nas’s most commercially successful release" it wasn't a slump. Perhaps the author intended some contextual consideration as the second quote comes from opening sentance of the same paragraph? it came across as misrepresentation when read by myself. and on the subject of opinion it is a crucial piece of work in NaS's cannon for a number of reasons and the only reason it was commercially sucessful is the quality therein. - anthony — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.31.138.67 (talk) 07:56, 9 June 2013 (UTC)

Delight???
Who the hell is this "Delight" in the performers section of the tracklisting grid? I've never heard of him/her, and I'm sure it was Foxxy Brown who Nas collaborated with for Watch Dem Niggas. And where was this artist on If I Rules The World & Street Dreams? Now I've probably got the wrong idea, and it's someone who played an instrument for the track (as Olu Dara is sometimes credited as a performer on Life's A Bitch), but I wanna know coz it's doin my head in tryna think who it could be.

- Mittens

Fair use rationale for Image:Nas-it-was-written-music-album.jpg
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Rolling Stone Review
The stars graphic shown next to Rolling Stone reviews were wrong for both this album and Nastradamus. Whoever had written/edited this had obviouisly looked at the "average user rating" rather than the actual RS score. In this case, RS gave the album 2 stars, rather than 4½ as Was Written. Thesean43 09:27, 17 June 2007 (UTC)

Never Overshadowed By Reasonable Doubt
Jay-Z's Reasonable Doubt took 6 years to go platinum but received 5 mics from The Source. Nas It Was Written was and still is Nas's best selling album to date. Although Reasonable Doubt wasn't a commercial success, the album still did very well. The italian mafioso gangsta lifestyle that was portayed by both Nas and Jay-Z was well respected and more a real life street image portrayed by artwork in its purest form. When Nas's Illmatic dropped in April 1994, no one understood Nas's flow and lyrics. His artwork took his listeners awhile for them to understand him as an artist. Illmatic definitely wasn't a commercial success, but was instantly considered a classic album.

Chicago Sun-Times review
Transcription using Google News Advanced News Archive Search. Chicago Sun-Times (Williams, Jean A. 11. July 21, 1996) review of It Was Written (1996):

"Recently released recordings are rated on a scale between (STAR) (poor) and (STAR)(STAR)(STAR)(STAR) (essential)."

"NAS, "It Was Written" (Columbia) (STAR)(STAR)(STAR) 1/2"

"Upon initial listen, it's not easy to know what to make of "It Was Written." The wonderful melange of sounds seizes you and holds you captive as you offer your body to each chunky beat."

"Your ear automatically surveys the wild yet carefully crafted syncopation and unconsciously notes the detailed arrangements containing musical contributions from the likes of Stephanie Mills, rap pioneer Kurtis Blow and even Chuck Mangione, Earl Klugh and the Eurythmics. What a motley bunch from which to draw samples."

"Thankfully, though, NAS isn't one of the mad samplers who relies almost exclusively on borrowed sounds to carry his creations. Listening to "It Was Written" a second or third time, you'll realize with relief that the spurts of profanities caught whizzing through your brain were part of something much deeper than the words themselves. NAS, baby-faced though he may be, has blessed each morsel of music with perceptive, poetic and complex lyrics about street life. These aren't your run-of-the-mill rhyme schemes. Some top-notch talent turns up in guest spots, including Lauryn Hill of the Fugees on "If I Ruled the World" and AZ, Foxxy Brown and Cormega on "Affirmative Action." The various producers represent the cream of the rap world - including Dr. Dre and Havoc of Mobb Deep."

Dan56 (talk) 04:18, 5 September 2009 (UTC)

Chicago Tribune review
Transcription using Google News Advanced News Archive Search. Chicago Tribune (Kot, Greg. 6. July 25, 1996) review of It Was Written (1996):

"Nas. It Was Written (Columbia) (star) (star) (star) 1/2."

"On "I Gave You Power," the key track from New Yorker Nas Jones' second album, the rapper delivers a devastating indictment of glock worship, the obsession with guns that is destroying young black males by the thousands. He imagines himself as a gun, "Making every ghetto foul/I might have took your first child/Scarred your life, crippled your style/I gave you power/I made you buck wild." Nas more than fulfills the promise of his hotly anticipated 1994 debut, "Illmatic," with its densely detailed ghetto vignettes. Behind a bevy of smoldering mid-tempo grooves, the rapper spills street-hardened rhymes without succumbing to thuggish posing. The disc, which also includes a somewhat disappointing summit between Nas and West Coast counterpart Dr. Dre, is neither melodically inviting enough to mount a Coolio-style takeover of the pop charts nor outrageous enough to suit gangsta fetishists. Instead, its power rests in the listen-up authority and devastating clarity Nas brings to his wordplay, a display of skills that evokes the '80s glory days of East Coast hip-hoppers Eric B and Rakim."

Dan56 (talk) 04:25, 5 September 2009 (UTC)

Affirmative Action Sample
the sample that is stated is the sample from the remix version which is released on a single. that is not the sample from the album version of that song. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.171.229.148 (talk) 11:34, 12 May 2010 (UTC)

Assessment comment
Substituted at 19:11, 29 April 2016 (UTC)

Poorly written and over-opinionated
Illmatic struggled to sell because Nas was “shy”? Is performing on stage, doing interviews, and going to clubs with a button-down shirt shy? Also it says that Illmatic was raw and unpolished. That is not true, Illmatic was well thought out, rehearsed, and well produced. There’s also no such thing as an “underground tone” as opposed to what? Nas was gangster rap, boastful, materialistic, hedonistic, etc. just like many mainstream 90s rapper, only he had a literary twist.

I made some changes and I hope no one minds. It easily improves it. 2600:1012:B1BB:3B93:B92A:8248:C935:87BA (talk) 17:45, 24 August 2022 (UTC)