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The Cheetah Girls (album)

The Cheetah Girls
The Cheetah Girls (soundtrack).JPG
Soundtrack album by The Cheetah Girls and Various Artists
Released August 12, 2003
Recorded 2002
Genre Pop, R&B, hip hop, dance
Length 19:59
Label
Producer
The Cheetah Girls and Various Artists chronology
The Cheetah Girls
(2003)
Cheetah-licious Christmas
(2005)Cheetah-licious Christmas2005
Alternative cover
Special edition cover
Special edition cover
Singles from The Cheetah Girls
  1. "Cinderella"
    Released: 2003
  2. "Girl Power"
    Released: 2003
  3. "Cheetah Sisters"
    Released: 2003
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars

The Cheetah Girls is the original motion picture soundtrack to the 2003 Walt Disney Pictures movie of the same name. It was released on August 12, 2003 on compact disc by Walt Disney Records and Columbia Records. The album was produced by Antonina Armato, Ray Cham, Tim James and executive produced by Debra Martin Chase and Whitney Houston. The album features appearances from Sonic Chaos, Char, and Hope 7.

The album was certified Double Platinum in the United States on June 7, 2005 after selling more than 2 million copies in the US alone. It is one of the biggest selling albums from Walt Disney Records ever, along with the High School Musical soundtrack.

A special edition titled "The Cheetah Girls - Special Edition Soundtrack" was released on June 22, 2004, featuring two brand new remixes of "Cinderella" and "Girl Power" with eight karaoke tracks. The special edition credits track 8, "End of the Line," to Hope 7, while the original release credits the song to Christi Mac. The reason for this is that Christi Mac is really Kristi McClave, who is the lead singer of Hope 7. McClave sang both this song and "Breakthrough" on the original soundtrack. On December 25, 2006, the original soundtrack was released digitally to the iTunes store in the United Kingdom.

Johnny Loftus from Allmusic reviewed the album stating "From the Disney Channel comes a TV movie adaptation of Deborah Gregory's Cheetah Girls book series. It's the continuing adventures of a smart, sassy singing group as they make their way in the pop music world with nothing but their wits and musical chops to guide them. Along the way, they live a little, rock a little, and learn a lot." Common Sense Media's review of the album complimented The Cheetah Girls' singing, but called the production "prefabricated" and generally disapproved of the musical presentation.


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