Welcome To The Dollhouse
- Danity Kane
- Band Name: Danity Kane
- Record Label: Bad Boy
- Release Date: Mar 18, 2008
User Score
8.2
out of 10
Universal acclaim- based on 13 Ratings
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 11 out of 13
-
Mixed: 0 out of 13
-
Negative: 2 out of 13
Review this album
-
-
Please sign in or create an account before writing a review.
-
-
Submit
-
Check Spelling
- User score
- Most active
- By date
- Most helpful
- Most Clicked
-
RayjayM.Apr 14, 20080What a waste of money. There are too many girls and no focus. This album goes down with the rest of the overproduced, undertalented, and sadly mistaken wannabes who will be forgotten in 5 years.
-
-
MeloD.Apr 1, 20089The CD was good.
-
-
[Anonymous]Apr 1, 20089I did not buy or listen to their first album, so I cannot compare the two. However, I can say without a doubt that this sophomore release is a body moving, heart jumping hit. When I am in a bad mood, I put it on turn it up and tune out everything else. Worth the money.
-
-
EdwardV.Apr 2, 20089I did buy their debut album and it was decent, some of the songs were some of my favorites, but I have to say that "Welcome to the Dollhouse" has more of edge than their debut album. It has songs that just make you want to get up and do something and it has soulful and vibrant music. I recommend the album.
-
-
JamesS.Apr 27, 20089
-
-
AngeeG.May 4, 200810
-
-
MikeM.Mar 29, 200810This album is great. Its a vast improvment over the first one. Suck For Love, 2 of You, Lights Out, Poetry, and Is Anbody Listening are fantastic. The weak songs are oddly the one featuring Missy Elliot and Rick Ross but they're still better than most songs out there right now sans Bleeding Love.
-
-
Welcome to the Doll House is a paler, plainer recycling of their debut.
-
70On the Missy Elliott-assisted 'Bad Girl,' the group croons about its seductive ways over heavy drums, while the bass-laden 'Sucka for Love' finds it confessing to being "addicted to kissing and hugging/touching and rubbing."
-
40Unlike their modestly appealing and tuneful debut, this disc from the girls of the "Making of the Band" series is generic and vapid, seemingly geared more for the strip mall than the strip club.