Blige took advantage of the momentum generated by Share My World by releasing a live album, The Tour, in 1998, followed by Share My World's much-anticipated studio follow-up, Mary, in 1999. In 2001, Blige returned with No More Drama, one of the most satisfying efforts of her career. Working with a stellar cast of writers and producers, including Missy Elliott, Jimmy Jam, and Terry Lewis, Blige wrote songs that managed to be simultaneously deeply personal and universal. That sort of appeal showed on the charts, as the album reached No. 2 on the Billboard 200 and No. 1 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. In addition, the single "Family Affair" was a crossover smash, topping several singles charts. For Love & Life, released in the summer of 2003, Blige reunited with Sean P. Diddy Combs. The pair's 1995 collaboration, "I'll Be There For You/You're All I Need To Get By," netted a Grammy award. Since then, Blige had not only developed as a performer, but as a writer. Blige co-wrote 17 of Love & Life's 18 tracks, and severed as co-executive producer with P. Diddy. Other guests include Method Man and 50 Cent. Blige is too young yet to shoulder comparisons to patron saints such as Franklin or Patti LaBelle, but her work thus far has suggested that someday she will. In the meantime, we can take delight in the way she's re-infused her genre with the powers of ache, love and womanhood. |
