Blonde (Frank Ocean album)

Blonde
Studio album by Frank Ocean
Released August 20, 2016 (2016-08-20)
Recorded 2013–2016
Studio
Genre
Length 60:08
Label Boys Don't Cry[8]
Producer
Frank Ocean chronology
Endless
(2016)
Blonde
(2016)
Singles from Blonde
  1. "Nikes"
    Released: August 20, 2016
Alternate cover

Blonde (alternately titled blond)[9][10] is the third[11][12][13] studio album by American singer Frank Ocean. It was released on August 20, 2016, as a timed exclusive on the iTunes Store and Apple Music, and followed the August 19 release of Ocean's visual album Endless.[10][14] Initially known as Boys Don't Cry and teased for a July 2015 release, the album suffered several delays and was the subject of widespread media anticipation leading up to its release.[15][16][17][18]

The album features an abstract and experimental sound in comparison to Ocean's previous releases, and includes guest vocals from André 3000, Beyoncé, Yung Lean and Kim Burrell, among others. Production was handled by Ocean himself, alongside a variety of high-profile record producers, including Malay and Om'Mas Keith, who collaborated with Ocean on Channel Orange, as well as James Blake, Jon Brion, Buddy Ross, Pharrell Williams and Rostam Batmanglij, among others.

Blonde debuted at number one in several countries, including the United States and the United Kingdom, and in its first week recorded sales of 232,000 copies (275,000 with album-equivalent units). Its physical release was accompanied by a magazine entitled Boys Don't Cry.[19] The album was supported by lead single "Nikes". It received widespread acclaim from critics and appeared on the year-end lists of 2016, with Metacritic naming it the third most critically acclaimed album of the year by music publications.

Background

On February 21, 2013, Ocean confirmed that he had started work on his next studio album, which he confirmed would be another concept album. He revealed that he was working with Tyler, the Creator, Pharrell Williams, and Danger Mouse on the record.[20] He later stated that he was being influenced by The Beach Boys and The Beatles. He also stated that he was interested in collaborating with Tame Impala and King Krule and wanted to record the album in Bora Bora.[21] Ocean ultimately began recording at New York's Electric Lady Studios and, after a period of writer's block, recorded in London at Abbey Road Studios in addition to various other studios.[1][22]

In April 2014, Ocean stated that his third album was nearly finished. In June 2014, Billboard reported that the singer was working with a string of artists such as Happy Perez (whom he worked with on Nostalgia, Ultra), Charlie Gambetta and Kevin Ristro, while producers Hit-Boy, Rodney Jerkins and Danger Mouse were also said to be on board.[23][24] On November 29, 2014, Ocean released a snippet of a new song supposedly from his upcoming follow-up to Channel Orange called "Memrise" on his official Tumblr page. The Guardian described the song as: "a song which affirms that despite reportedly changing labels and management, he has maintained both his experimentation and sense of melancholy in the intervening years".[25]

Music and composition

Blonde features an abstract, atmospheric sound in comparison to Ocean's previous work, and utilizes a variety of unconventional musical elements.[26] The Quietus wrote that its form "isn't that of a typical pop or R&B album – it tends to meander into his surreal dreamscapes, cut with jarring samples of conversation, odd effects, drifting guitars and beatless melodies that go on longer than expected."[27] The Daily Telegraph described its sound as "a mellifluous concoction of shimmering melodic haze and ambient mood, almost entirely absent of anything resembling a singalong chorus or club groove."[28] The Observer's Kate Mossman characterized the album as "cerebral, non-macho, boundary-free R&B."[26] The Guardian tenatively likened Blonde to a collection of loose sketches and compared its "lush and atmospheric" tracks to experimental and texture-driven albums such as Radiohead's Kid A (2000) and Big Star's Third (1974), writing that "the tone is muted and introspective, full of spectral guitar and lacking not just hefty beats but any kind of percussion at all."[29]

Discussing its musical eclecticism, Rolling Stone wrote that "this is an R&B album in only the most elastic and expansive sense of the term" and noted that "minimalist rock guitar and simple electric keyboard work drive numerous songs; twitchy rhythms and bizarre vocal effects creep in from the edges. Songs change shape subtly as they go, rarely ending in the same place they began."[7] Ann Powers described the album as "equal parts psychedelic indie rock, post-IDM electronica, post-U2 / Coldplay-esque Eno-pop, post-Drake hip hop, and post-Maxwell drifty soul / R&B," and wrote that "experimental, druggy sonics abound."[30] Nina Corcoran from Consequence of Sound described Blonde as featuring an avant-garde minimalist style similar to the work of Brian Eno, and noted that Ocean often utilizes "acoustic and electric guitars over traditional synth and bass-heavy R&B."[31] The Independent wrote that "one track bleeds languidly into another, as if we're listening to a long, stoned stream-of-consciousness," and described the album's sound as a "glitchy, miasmic brand of R&B."[32]

The Daily Telegraph noted Ocean's use of varispeed and Auto-Tune effects on his voice,[28] while Greg Kot stated that he utilizes these audio processing devices to employ "two distinct voices, like characters in a play, a recurring theme throughout the album".[33] Spin magazine's Dan Weiss compared his vocal treatments to those of Prince's aborted Camille album.[34] The Daily Telegraph also suggested that Ocean's voice and melodies obscured the experimental nature of his compositions.[28] The track "Seigfried" interpolates a spoken word part by Elliott Smith and "White Ferrari" borrows musical elements from the Beatles' song "Here, There and Everywhere", while "Close to You" incorporates a Stevie Wonder sample.[34] Guest vocalist André 3000 contributes a rapid rap verse on "Solo (Reprise)" which has been described as the album's only overt guest feature.[26] "Pretty Sweet" features gospel choir elements and dissonant noise.[29] The album ends with an interview between Ocean and his brother Ryan, recorded when Ryan was 11 years old.[34]

Release and promotion

On April 6, 2015, Ocean announced that his follow-up to Channel Orange would be released in July, as well as a publication, although no further details were released. The album was ultimately not released in July, with no explanation given for its delay. The publication was rumored to be called Boys Don't Cry, and was slated to feature the aforementioned "Memrise", although the track did not make the final track listing.[35][36][37]

On July 2, 2016, Ocean hinted at a possible third album with an image on his website pointing to a July release date. The image shows a library card labeled Boys Don't Cry with numerous stamps, implying various due dates. The dates begin with July 2, 2015, and conclude with July 2016, and November 13, 2016. Ocean's brother, Ryan Breaux, further suggested this release with an Instagram caption of the same library card photo reading "BOYS DON'T CRY #JULY2016".[38] On August 1, 2016, a live video hosted by Apple Music showing an empty hall was launched on the website boysdontcry.co.[19] The website also featured a new design and the video marked the first update on the website since a "date due" post from July.[39]

On August 1, 2016, a video appeared that showed Ocean woodworking and sporadically playing instrumentals on loop.[19] That same day, many news outlets reported that August 5, 2016, could be the release date for Boys Don't Cry.[40][41] The video was revealed to be promotion for Endless, a 45-minute-long visual album that began streaming on Apple Music on August 19, 2016.[40] The day after the release of Endless, Ocean posted a new picture on his website advertising four pop-up shops in Los Angeles, New York City, Chicago and London. These shops contained hundreds of magazines, with three different covers and the album on a CD included with each cover, the covers also appear in the magazine, the first cover—which is part of a collection of pictures called "I'm a Morning Person"—was taken in Berlin, Germany by Wolfgang Tillmans, whose song "Device Control" was sampled on the songs "Device Control" and "Higgs" on Endless and the alternate cover (Which does not appear in the magazine, however, it is one of the alternate covers of the magazine) appears to have been shot by Viviane Sassen in Tokyo, Japan and was taken as part of a collection of other photographs, which appears in the "Foxface" collection of pictures.[42][43] The magazines were free and were available to one per person. Later in the day, the album was released exclusively on the iTunes Store and Apple Music. However, the track list differed from the digital version of the album, with an extended version of "Nikes" featuring Japanese rapper KOHH.[44][45] "Nikes" was officially released as the album's lead single on August 20, 2016.[46][47]

Rather than going on a typical promotional tour playing radio festivals and appearing on television shows, Ocean spent a month after the release of Blonde, traveling to countries such as China, Japan and France. He also chose not to submit Blonde for consideration at the Grammy Awards, stating "that institution certainly has nostalgic importance... It just doesn't seem to be representing very well for people who come from where I come from, and hold down what I hold down."[1]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?8.4/10[48]
Metacritic87/100[49]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[50]
The Daily Telegraph[28]
Entertainment WeeklyA[51]
The Guardian[29]
The Observer[26]
Pitchfork9.0/10[52]
Rolling Stone[7]
Spin8/10[34]
The Times[53]
ViceB+[54]

Blonde received widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 87, based on 38 reviews.[49] Mojo reviewer Andy Cowan called it "a beguiling, meandering sprawl that rewards total immersion",[55] while Tara Joshi deemed Blonde a "fully conceptualised, curated personal vision" and "a sublime and largely impressive album" in her review for The Quietus.[27] In Rolling Stone, Jonah Weiner described the album as "by turns oblique, smolderingly direct, forlorn, funny, dissonant and gorgeous: marvel of digital-age psychedelic pop."[7] Writing for The Guardian, Tim Jonze hailed Blonde as "one of the most intriguing and contrary records ever made". He said that "what originally appear to be Blonde's flaws – its loose ends and ambiguities – end up as its strengths," concluding that "what gradually emerges is a record of enigmatic beauty, intoxicating depth and intense emotion."[29] According to Pitchfork journalist Ryan Dombal, while Channel Orange had boasted a more eclectic range of styles, Blonde showed Ocean expressing his romantic, philosophical, and melancholic ideas and emotions over an especially spare musical backdrop, giving the record an intimacy that "attracts the ear, bubbles the brain, raises the flesh".[52]

Neil McCormick was somewhat less enthusiastic. In The Daily Telegraph, he wrote that Blonde "should be celebrated as part of a generational shift away from the obvious in pop", while finding the record to be "meandering, contemplative and introverted", suggesting that it would be a laborious experience for some listeners.[28] AllMusic's Andy Kellman deemed it "undiluted and progressive" but qualified his praise by stating that "over the course of an hour, all the sparsely ornamented ruminations can be a bit of a chore to absorb, no matter how much one hangs on each line".[50] In Vice, Robert Christgau admired Ocean's reliance on his "expressive and capable but unathletic voice", the candid stories explored on "Good Guy" and "Facebook Story", and more aggressive songs such as "Nights". "As on Channel Orange, however, his angst is a luxury of leisure", Christgau wrote, finding the details of Ocean's interpersonal lyrics occasionally relatable but more often "specific to his social status".[54] Andy Gill was more critical in The Independent, deeming much of the music lethargic, aimless, and devoid of strong melodies.[32]

Year-end rankings

At the end of 2016, Blonde appeared on a number of critics' lists ranking the year's top albums. According to Metacritic, it was the third most prominently ranked album of 2016.[56]

Publication List Rank Ref.
Complex The 50 Best Albums of 2016
6
Consequence of Sound Top 50 Albums of 2016
4
The Guardian The 40 Best Albums of 2016
2
The Independent The 20 Best Albums of 2016
5
Mojo The 50 Best Albums of 2016
7
NME
10
Paste
10
Pitchfork
2
Rolling Stone
5
The Skinny
1
Spin
2
Stereogum
2
Time The Top 10 Best Albums
1
The Wire The Top 50 Releases of the Year
43

Commercial performance

In the first week of release, Blonde debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 and recorded 276,000 album-equivalent units—232,000 of which were purchases of the entire album.[71] The songs on the album were collectively streamed more than 65.4 million times, second behind only the streams for Views by Drake during that week.[71] Forbes estimated that Blonde earned Ocean nearly one million in profits after one week of availability, attributing this to him releasing the album independently and as a limited exclusive release on iTunes and Apple Music.[72] Blonde has generated 404 million on-demand audio streams for its songs in the US through February 9, 2017, according to Nielsen Music. The album has earned 620,000 album-equivalent units, of which 348,000 are in traditional album sales.[73]

Track listing

Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[2]

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Nikes"Christopher Breaux5:14
2."Ivy"
  • Breaux
  • Ho
4:09
3."Pink + White"
  • Ocean
  • Williams
3:04
4."Be Yourself"Buddy Ross[a] 1:26
5."Solo"
  • Breaux
  • Ho
4:17
6."Skyline To"
  • Ocean
  • Ho
  • Keith
3:04
7."Self Control"Breaux
4:09
8."Good Guy"BreauxOcean1:06
9."Nights"
  • Ocean
  • Thornalley
  • Uzowuru
  • Ross
5:07
10."Solo (Reprise)"
  • Ocean
  • Blake
  • Brion
1:18
11."Pretty Sweet"Breaux
  • Ocean
  • Ho
  • Keith
2:37
12."Facebook Story"Ocean1:08
13."Close to You"1:25
14."White Ferrari"
  • Ocean
  • Brion
  • Keith
4:08
15."Seigfried"
  • Ocean
  • Ho
5:34
16."Godspeed"
  • Breaux
  • Ho
  • Ocean
  • Keith
  • Ho
  • Blake
2:57
17."Futura Free" (includes unlisted track "Interviews", written by Ross[a])
  • Ocean
  • Keith
  • Ho
9:24

Notes

  • "Nikes" features additional vocals by Amber Coffman; the original magazine edition of "Nikes" featured uncredited vocals by KOHH[74]
  • "Pink + White" features additional vocals by Beyoncé Knowles-Carter
  • "Be Yourself" features uncredited vocals by Rosie Watson[75]
  • "Solo" features additional vocals by Jazmine Sullivan
  • "Self Control" features uncredited vocals by Austin Feinstein[76]
  • "Nights" is stylized as "Night.s" in physical releases
  • "Solo (Reprise)" features uncredited vocals by André 3000[77]
  • "Facebook Story" features uncredited vocals by Sebastian[78]
  • "Godspeed" features vocals by Kim Burrell and Yung Lean
  • "Interviews" features interviews with Ryan Moore, Ibrahim Hariri, Na-Kel Smith, Sage Elsessler, Evan Clark, Nabil Hariri and Frank Ocean, conducted by Mikey Alfred

Samples

Personnel

Production and arrangement

  • Frank Ocean – production (tracks 1–3, 5–17), arrangement (tracks 1, 5, 6, 9, 13, 14, 16), executive production
  • Malay Ho – production (tracks 1, 6, 7, 11, 15–17), arrangement (tracks 1, 6, 11)
  • Om'Mas Keith – production (tracks 1, 2, 6, 11, 14, 16, 17), arrangement (tracks 1, 11, 17)
  • James Blake – production (tracks 5, 10, 16), arrangement (tracks 5, 10, 16)
  • Jon Brion – production (tracks 7, 10, 14), arrangement (tracks 7, 9–11, 14), string arrangement (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Buddy Ross – production (tracks 9, 13), arrangement (tracks 9, 13, 14)
  • Rostam Batmanglij – production (track 2), arrangement (track 2)
  • Pharrell Williams – production (track 3)
  • Joe Thornalley – production (track 9), arrangement (track 9)
  • Michael Uzowuru – production (track 9)
  • Francis Starlite – production (track 13), arrangement (track 13)
  • Alex Giannascoli – arrangement (tracks 7, 14)
  • Christophe Chassol – arrangement (track 6)
  • Austin Feinstein – arrangement (track 7)
  • Sebastian Akchotè – arrangement (track 16), string arrangement (track 16)
  • Benjamin Wright – string arrangement (track 3)
  • Jonny Greenwood – string arrangement (track 15)

Musicians

  • Frank Ocean – lead vocals, interview subject (track 17), keyboards (tracks 8, 17), programming (track 7), sample programming (track 14), drum programming (track 17), additional programming (tracks 1, 5, 16), guitars (track 9), choir (track 16)
  • Kim Burrell – featured vocals (track 16)
  • Yung Lean – featured vocals (track 16)
  • Amber Coffman – additional vocals (track 1)
  • Jazmine Sullivan – additional vocals (track 6)
  • Beyoncé Knowles-Carter – additional vocals (track 3)
  • Mikey Alfred – interviewer (track 17)
  • Ryan Moore – interview subject (track 17)
  • Ibrahim Hariri – interview subject (track 17)
  • Na'kel Smith – interview subject (track 17)
  • Sage Elesser – interview subject (track 17)
  • Evan Clark – interview subject (track 17)
  • Nabil Hariri – interview subject (track 17)
  • Malay Ho – keyboards (tracks 14–17), guitars (tracks 6, 7, 11, 15), drum programming (tracks 1, 11), mellotron (track 1), bass (track 15)
  • Buddy Ross – keyboards (tracks 9, 13, 14, 17), bass (track 11), additional programming (track 13)
  • Jon Brion – keyboards (tracks 7, 9, 10, 14), drum programming (track 10)
  • Pharrell Williams – keyboards (track 3), drum programming (track 3), bass (track 3)
  • Joe Thornalley – keyboards (track 9), drum programming (tracks 9, 13)
  • James Blake – keyboards (tracks 5, 6, 10, 16)
  • Mars 1500 – keyboards (tracks 5, 16)
  • Christophe Chassol – keyboards (track 6), Moog solo (track 6)
  • Rostam Batmanglij – keyboards (track 15)
  • Om'Mas Keith – drum programming (tracks 1, 11, 17), bass (track 17)
  • Sebastian Akchotè – drum programming (track 14), sample programming (track 14), strings (track 16)
  • Tyler Okonma – drum programming (track 6)
  • Michael Uzowuru – drum programming (track 9)
  • Francis Starlite – vocoder (track 13)
  • Alex Giannascoli – guitars (tracks 7, 14)
  • Fish – guitars (track 2)
  • Austin Feinstein – guitars (track 7)
  • Spaceman – guitars (track 9)
  • Eric Gorfain – violin concertmaster (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Daphne Chen – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Marisa Kuney – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Charlie Bisharat – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Katie Sloan – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Songa Lee – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Gina Kronstadt – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Lisa Dondlinger – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Terry Glenny – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Chris Woods – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Neel Hammond – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Marcy Vaj – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Crystal Alforque – violin (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Leah Katz – viola (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Rodney Wirtz – viola (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Stefan Smith – viola (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Adriana Zoppo – viola (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • John Krovoza – cello (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Simon Huber – cello (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Ginger Murphy – cello (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Alisha Bauer – cello (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Stefanie Fife – cello (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • London Contemporary Orchestra – strings (track 15)

Technical personnel

  • Caleb Laven – recording engineering
  • Jeff Ellis – recording engineering
  • Jason Lader – recording engineering
  • Matt Mysko – recording engineering
  • Sam Petts-Davies – recording engineering
  • Tom Elmhirst – mix engineering
  • Noah Goldstein – mix engineering
  • David Wrench – mix engineering
  • Mike Dean – mastering engineering
  • Greg Keller – strings recording (tracks 3, 7, 11)
  • Eric Caudieux – strings recording (tracks 3, 7, 11)

Design

  • Frank Ocean – creative direction, photography
  • Thomas Mastorakos – creative direction
  • Viviane Sassen – photography
  • Wolfgang Tillmans – photography
  • Jessica Haye – photography

Charts

Certifications

Region CertificationCertified units/Sales
Denmark (IFPI Denmark)[107] Gold 20,000^
United Kingdom (BPI)[108] Gold 100,000^
United States (RIAA)[109] Platinum 1,000,000^

^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

List of release dates, formats, and label
Region Date Format Label Ref(s)
  • Chicago
  • London
  • Los Angeles
  • New York City
August 20, 2016 Magazine with CD (limited pop-up store release) Boys Don't Cry [9]
Various
[10]
September 9, 2016
  • Digital download
  • streaming
[14]
November 25, 2016
  • CD
  • vinyl (limited online release)
XL [110]

See also

References

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