Lickin' on Both Sides is the debut studio album by British R&B/UK garage group Mis-Teeq, released by Telstar Records on 29 October 2001. It was primarily produced by Stargate, with additional production from Jensen & Larsson, and Synth among others. The album became a top-five success in the United Kingdom, reaching number three on the national albums chart. The album was re-released three times, with the final release, a special edition, being released on 22 June 2002. Lickin' on Both Sides was certified double platinum in the UK. Altogether the album spawned five top-ten singles.
Alesha Dixon and Sabrina Washington met in 1997 at Dance Attic studios in Fulham through Louise Porter, who was assembling a group for her production company, Big Out Ltd. The pair worked with Porter for several years before being joined by Tina Barrett to form a trio that performed singing and dancing engagements. Operating under the name Face2Face, the group remained unsigned, and its members continued to hold employment outside their musical activities. Barrett subsequently departed following a successful audition for Simon Fuller, joining S Club 7. She was replaced by Zena McNally and Su-Elise Nash. The groupâÂÂs producer, David Brant introduced them, via DJ Darren Stokes of Tin Tin Out, to Inferno Records A&R representative Pat Travers. Travers subsequently signed the group to Telstar Records and oversaw a change of name to Mis-Teeq.
"Why?" was released as the lead single from Lickin' on Both Sides on 18 September 2000. Serving as the group's debut single, it was later being re-released on 8 January 2001. The original version is a Latin-inflected mid-tempo R&B track. The more known version is a UK garage remix done by Matt "Jam" Lamont and DJ Face.
"All I Want" was released as the album's second single on 11 June 2001. The UK garage track was produced by Sunship and became the group's highest-charting single, at No. 2.
"One Night Stand" was released on 15 October 2001 as the album's third single. It is an R&B song produced by Stargate, also receiving a garage remix by Sunship. The song was later released in the U.S. as the group's second American single in 2004. The group performed the song at the 2002 Brit Awards.
"B with Me" was released as the fourth single on 18 February 2002. For the single release, the song received a garage remix produced by Bump & Flex.
"Roll On" was released as the album's fifth and final single on 17 June 2002. It was released as a double A-single alongside a cover of Montell Jordan's song "This Is How We Do It". The single version of "Roll On" was remixed by Rishi Rich and included on the soundtrack for the film Ali G Indahouse.
MTV Asia commended Lickin' On Both Sides for introducing a distinct female presence to the UK garage scene, combining smooth R&B vocals with energetic two-step rhythms and urban production. The review highlighted tracks such as "All I Want," "One Night Stand," "That Type of Girl," "B With Me," and "Nasty" as particularly notable. While the album's attempt at ballads, exemplified by the guitar-driven "These Days," was considered less effective, the overall assessment positioned the group as innovative and stylistically distinctive within the contemporary R&B and garage landscape."
Writing for Yahoo! Music UK, critic Josh Rogan observed that Mis-Teeq successfully blend two-step rhythms with bold vocals and surprisingly gritty lyrical delivery. Although he dismissed the track "These Days" as a significant low point, he praised the rest of Lickin' on Both Sides, calling it a "triumph showing that these three girls aren't so much Destiny's children but UK sisters doing it for themselves." NME Alex Needham found that while the album "demonstrates that their attachment to the UK garage scene is more than skin deep [...] it's when Mis-Teeq start to ape their American peers that their deficiencies become quickly apparent â occasionally thin voices, uninventive MCing and derivative lyrics.
Lickin' on Both Sides achieved significant commercial success in the United Kingdom and across Europe following its release in 2001. It debuted and peaked at number three on the UK Albums Chart and reached number two on the UK R&B Albums Chart. In Scotland, it attained a peak position of number 24 on the Scottish Albums Chart. On the year-end charts, the album was ranked number 64 on the UK Albums Chart for 2001 and number 90 for 2002, reflecting sustained sales across consecutive years. The album was certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in the United Kingdom, denoting shipments of 480,000 copies.
Elsewhere in Europe, the album reached number 20 on the European Albums Chart and performed strongly in several national markets, including a peak of number three in Iceland. It opened at number 28 in the Wallonian region of Belgium, also reaching number 68 in Switzerland, and number 82 in France. In Australia, the album peaked at number 152 on the ARIA Albums Chart.
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