Commercial performance The album debuted at number 25 on the US
Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 42,000 copies in the United States. It also entered at seven on
Billboards
R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and at number 12 on its
Digital Albums chart.
Critical response Let Freedom Reign received positive reviews from most music critics.
Allmusic writer Andy Kellman gave it four out of five stars and complimented its "upbeat disposition", calling it "the most energetic of Chrisette’s three albums".
Entertainment Weeklys Simon Vozick-Levinson noted Michele's "assured performances" and commended her "timelessly sleek voice" and the album's "crisp, understated backdrops". Elysa Gardner of
USA Today gave the album three out of four stars and complimented her "tangy singing, a distinctly feminine mix of silvery sensuality and catch-in-the-throat yearning". Despite writing favorably of its arrangements and Michele's vocals,
New York Daily News writer Jim Farber found the album's subject matter clichéd and wrote that it "seems torn between mainstream R&B and something more profound".
The Philadelphia Inquirers A.D. Amorosi viewed that it "is not as focused as her previous albums", but complimented Michele's "elegant voice" and commented that "little in her catalog stands out as gorgeously as the ferocious ballad 'Goodbye Game'". Nate Chinen of
The New York Times responded negatively to Michele's rapping on the album's title track, calling her verses "artless and stiff". However, Chinen commented more favorably of its other songs and wrote that "Michele is at her best redressing infringements more personal than political in nature". ==Track listing==