The Boatlift spawned four singles: "Go Girl", "The Anthem", "Secret Admirer", and "Sticky Icky". The album received generally positive reviews from music critics but received small commercial success despite critical acclaim. It debuted at number 50 on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 22,398 copies in its first week.[1]
The Boatlift garnered a positive reception from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 69, based on five reviews.[2]
Patrick Taylor of RapReviews praised the album's versatile production for going beyond crunk music and showing depth in club anthems, concluding that "Pitbull continues to prove himself as an MC who is able to bridge Latin hip hop and Southern hip hop, creating a sound that should appeal to fans from both camps. He may not be the deepest lyricist on earth, and his attempts at bedroom music may fall flat, but he makes a mean soundtrack for a night out."[6] DJBooth's Nathan Slavik praised Pitbull for exploring vastly different genres to create party tracks with a worldview appeal and doing them with a talented cast of featured artists and producers, saying that "The Boatlift isn’t going to expand your intellectual or spiritual horizons, but it is without question a go-to album for all your booty-shakin needs."[4] Jose Davila of Vibe also praised the album's genre-hopping production mixing well with Pitbull's bilingual, charismatic flow, saying that it "solidifies Pitbull's position as one of the most diverse party MCs around. And little else."[8]
Wilson McBee of Slant Magazine said that, "For better or worse, the story of Boatlift concerns more the production and song structures than Pitbull’s own rapping. It’s clear he’d rather be a chorus-shouter than a verse-spitter, or at least he believes that will help him sell more records."[7]AllMusic's David Jeffries commended the production and lyrical hooks for being catchy but felt that it lacked a sense of personality and talent compared to El Mariel, saying to consider The Boatlift "a fun floor-filler, but just not up to Pitbull's usual standards."[3] A writer for Music for America felt that Pitbull was wasting his talent throughout the record rhyming typical club tracks and party jams and would like to see him collaborate with artists like Little Brother, 2Mex, Deep Thinkers and Roots Manuva.[9]
Commercial performance
The Boatlift debuted at number 50 on the US Billboard 200 chart, selling 22,398 copies in its first week.[10] In its second week, the album dropped to number 134 on the chart, selling an additional 9,686 copies.[11] As of April 2009, the album has sold 131,000 copies in the United States.[12]
"Fuego (DJ Buddha Remix)" – remix of "Fuego" from Pitbull's album El Mariel.
"Stripper Pole (Remix)" – remix of the Toby Love song "Stripper Pole" performed with KP Da Moneymaker; original version appears on Toby Love's self-titled album.
"Tell Me (Remix)" – remix of the Ken-Y song "Dime"; original version appears on the album Masterpiece.
Personnel
Pitbull – lead vocals
AIM – guest vocals (4)
Kori Anders – assistant audio mixing (16)
Keith Bizz – audio mixing (5)
Leslie Brathwaite – audio mixing (16)
Reather Bryant – percussion (14)
Al Burna – recording engineer (1, 5, 8-9, 14, 17-18)
Josh Butler – recording engineer (12)
Casely – additional vocals (5)
Albert Castillo – recording engineer, audio mixing (7)
Baker, Geoff (2005), ""La Habana que no conoces": Cuban rap and the social construction of urban space", Ethnomusicology Forum, vol. 15, no. 2, pp. 215–246.
"Pitbull: El Capitan", Giant Magazine, New York City, New York, 6 December 2007, retrieved 2008-02-06.
Kalikwest Publication Group (24 March 2005), "Pitbull On", MySpace Music, retrieved 2008-02-06.