"Killing Time" was also featured in "Men in Black: The Album" and released as a promotional single in 1997.
"[5] The album spent twenty-six weeks on the US Billboard 200 chart and peaked at number sixty-seven.
It was featured on the Men In Black film and its accompanying soundtrack, for which it was released as a promotional single in 1997.
John Bush of the website AllMusic felt that "Destiny's Child isn't quite just another debut album from an R&B girl group [...] Their voices sound beautiful together.
[13] While not a massive commercial success, the album has been retrospectively regarded as "a solid introduction to their twin strengths of sweeping ballads and tight harmonies.
"[14][15] Jon O'Brien of Billboard recognized "No, No, No" as "one of the top-tier uptempos in Destiny’s Child’s catalog," further remarking that "[h]ad the rest of their debut album reached the same heights, their world domination would no doubt have come a little sooner.
"[18] However, when discussing the overall impact of the album, he lauded the project as "an artifact of the elements central to Destiny's Child's musical persona: The syncopated, rapid vocal style that Beyoncé innovated on "No, No, No Pt 2," and lyrical themes of romantic equity, mutual respect, self-confidence and autonomy, [which] would govern the band's career-defining hits and influence many of their contemporaries.