Emotion (Carly Rae Jepsen album)

Emotion
Studio album by Carly Rae Jepsen
Released June 24, 2015 (2015-06-24)
Recorded 2013–15
Genre
Length 44:02
Label
Producer
Carly Rae Jepsen chronology
Kiss: The Remix
(2013)
Emotion
(2015)
Emotion Remixed +
(2016)
Singles from Emotion
  1. "I Really Like You"
    Released: March 2, 2015
  2. "Run Away with Me"
    Released: July 17, 2015
  3. "Your Type"
    Released: November 9, 2015
  4. "Boy Problems"

Emotion (stylized as E•MO•TION) is the third studio album by Canadian singer Carly Rae Jepsen. It was released on June 24, 2015 in Japan and on August 21, 2015 worldwide through 604, School Boy, and Interscope Records.[3][4][5][6] Looking to transition from the "pure pop"-oriented nature of Kiss, Jepsen found inspiration in 1980s music and alternative styles. She enlisted a team of indie-pop collaborators including Dev Hynes, Ariel Rechtshaid and Rostam Batmanglij.

Emotion received generally positive reviews from contemporary music critics, who placed the album on many year-end lists. Despite this, the album underperformed worldwide, debuting at number sixteen on the Billboard 200 with 16,153 units and number eight in Canada with 2,600 copies sold. However, Emotion was a success in Japan where it was released two months earlier, debuting at number eight with 12,189 physical copies sold and subsequently being certified Gold for shipments exceeding 100,000 copies by the RIAJ.

The album was preceded by the release of its lead single, "I Really Like You", which reached top five in several territories including the United Kingdom and Japan. It was followed by "Run Away with Me" and "Your Type". Jepsen embarked on the Gimmie Love Tour in support of the album in November 2015, with a second leg commencing in February 2016.

Background

Following the sudden worldwide success of "Call Me Maybe" in 2012, Jepsen found that the song had become "[this] huge, ginormous thing that really overshadowed the rest of our project" and further singles issued from Kiss failed to gain any traction.[7][8] Jepsen viewed it as an opportunity to reflect and step back from the overexposure, and to discover what direction to take with her next album. She met with her record label and management after the Summer Kiss Tour wrapped up in late-2013, stating: "'I want you to put your faith in me that I'll come back when it's ready,' and they did and I'm very lucky to have a team that wasn't about trying to mass produce things and was really more looking at the quality of it."[7]

Jepsen spent time regrouping; searching for a "detour" that came to be in the form of a Broadway role: "I thought, how amazing would it be to take a left turn, somehow, and still come back to this? [...] but 'left turn'—I didn’t know what that meant."[9] She was approached by the producers of Rodgers + Hammerstein's Cinderella to audition for the titular character, and was formally offered the part after auditioning in Los Angeles and passing callbacks in New York.[9][10] Jepsen assumed the role for twelve weeks from February 2014 to June 2014, and during this time she decided to handle her own A&R. With help from guitarist Tavish Crowe, Jepsen began emailing artists she admired to see if they were interested in collaborating, including Tegan and Sara, Rostam Batmanglij of Vampire Weekend and Shellback.[8]

Writing and development

In June 2013, Jepsen told Idolator she had been working on her third studio album since "the day Kiss was turned in".[11] She shared that the record would incorporate pop and folk music, and channeled Robyn, La Roux, Kimbra and Dragonette as influences for the studio sessions.[12] It was confirmed that she was working with her past producers, Josh Ramsay, Ryan Stewart and Max Martin while meeting with new ones as Benny Blanco and Stargate.[13][14] It was tentatively due for release in the first quarter of 2014 but was pushed back. Jepsen stated that she would not rush the album, instead taking her time to make sure it was of quality.[11][15]

Eternal Summer was a working title for the album, named after a song from an entire indie pop effort that was scrapped:

"I made an indie album that probably no one will ever hear. I think there is a natural rebellion when you have success in one are(a) to completely rebel against that. I needed to get that out of my system, I think. I made really weird music. But I didn’t want to release that album. It felt not like the move I felt like making. At first, when I was in L.A. [working on the new album], I was making very pure pure pop again, kind of almost Kiss. I wasn’t feeling that. The indie album was too hot, too cold. Emotion felt like the right balance."[16]

Throughout the process of the album, it was revealed that 250 songs were composed.[17] Jepsen announced the title of the album on April 11, 2015 and released the cover artwork on April 15, 2015. The track listing was revealed on June 2, 2015.[18][19][20][21][22]

Recording locations

Jepsen recorded the album at a multitude of recording studios such as Wolf Cousins Studios (Stockholm, Sweden), P.S. Studio (Stockholm, Sweden), Kinglet Studios (Stockholm, Sweden), Heavy Dunt Studios (Burbank, California), No Excuses Studio (Santa Monica, California), Conway Recording Studios (Hollywood, California), Templebase Studios (Hollywood, California), United Recording (Hollywood, California), Paramount Studios (Hollywood, California), The Record Plant (Hollywood, California), Echo Studio (Los Angeles, California), MXM Studios (Los Angeles, California), Venice Way Studios (Los Angeles, California), Rocket Carousel Studios (Los Angeles, California), Lounge Studios (New York City, New York), Kustom Deluxe Studio (Nashville, Tennessee), Monarch Studios (Vancouver, British Columbia).

Promotion and release

The album's promotion was kicked off with a live performance of the album's lead single, "I Really Like You" at Good Morning America on March 5, 2015. On April 4, 2015, Jepsen performed "All That" at Saturday Night Live.[23] On May 1, 2015, Jepsen performed "Run Away with Me", "E·MO·TION", "Your Type", "Black Heart" and "Gimmie Love" at a show in Beijing, China.[24] On the release date of E·MO·TION in the United States, August 21, Jepsen performed "Run Away with Me" on Today. During her tour in South-Africa in October 2015 she performed Run Away With Me on South-African Idols.

Jepsen at the Capital Pride in 2015, where she performed several songs from Emotion.

Singles

The album's lead single, "I Really Like You", was released on iTunes Store on March 2, 2015. The song become a commercial success worldwide, reaching the top 40 in Australia, Canada, Japan, and Netherlands, and has reached number 39 on the US Billboard Hot 100, number 3 in Ireland and on the UK Singles Chart, and number 1 on the Scottish Singles Chart. The music video was released in March 6, 2015, featuring Tom Hanks and Justin Bieber.

"Run Away with Me" was released as the album's second single on July 17, 2015.[25][26] The music video for "Run Away with Me" was released on July 17, 2015 and directed by Carly's boyfriend, director David Kalani Larkins. The video was filmed in Tokyo, New York City, and Paris.[27] The track was premiered on Hit FM in Spain on June 22, 2015.[28]

"Your Type" was re-released as the third official single on November 9, 2015 (in Europe).[29] An official remix package was released on December 11, 2015 in Europe and Oceania and on December 18, 2015 in North America.[30] Its music video, directed by Gia Coppola, premiered November 3, 2015 and follows Jepsen on a Cinderella-inspired story where her character fantasizes about becoming a pop star.[31][32]

"Boy Problems" will serve as the album's fourth single. Its music video was released on April 8, 2016.[33]

Other songs

"All That" was made available for purchase on April 5, 2015 as the first promotional single. The title track, "E•MO•TION", was premiered on June 3, 2015.[34][35] "Run Away with Me" and "Your Type" also premiered on a Spanish radio station prior to the album's release on June 22, 2015. "Warm Blood" was released as the second promotional single on July 31, 2015. "Making the Most of the Night" was released as the third promotional single on August 7, 2015. "Your Type" was released as the fourth promotional single on August 14, 2015.[36]

"When I'm Alone", a song written and co-composed by Jepsen during sessions for Emotion, was eventually purchased by SM Entertainment and given to K-pop girl group f(x) for their album 4 Walls.[37]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic77/100[38]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[39]
The A.V. ClubB+[40]
Consequence of SoundB+[41]
Entertainment WeeklyA-[2]
Exclaim!8/10[42]
NME7/10[43]
Pitchfork7.4/10[1]
Rolling Stone[44]
Slant Magazine[45]
Spin7/10[46]

Emotion received generally positive reviews upon its release, many commending its production and its 80's pop authenticity .[38] Matthew Welch of Entertainment Weekly gave the album a A- grade, writing "Her effervescent follow-up [is] an '80s-inflected collection of sweetly breezy dance-pop baubles. Emotion is the sound of a girl who's had her career-defining smash; now she just wants to have fun."[2] Jim Farber of New York Daily News gave the album a three out of five stars, feeling that "Due to the era the album fetishes, the music sounds inescapably chintzy.... Jepsen’s improbably young voice helps distract from that." Siri Svay of Music Connection gave the album seven out of ten stars, writing "Jepsen has crafted an album embedded with catchy bubblegum pop tunes that will get stuck in your head while you’re soaking up summer sun by the pool." Jackie Dosmanos of ABS-CBN News was positive, stating "Emotion is a roller coaster of small and big triumphs. That’s pure accomplishment for a young woman who’s got plenty of room to grow in her musical career."[47] Liam Green of Treble also gave a positive review, concluding that "Emotion is a phenomenal pop album, one I didn't see coming at all. Carly Rae Jepsen has gone from a one-hit-wonder risk to a pitch-perfect chronicler of the universal, oft-sappy but nonetheless true feelings that come with falling in love."[48] Sasha Geffen of Consequence of Sound gave the album a B+ grade, writing "Emotion rolls out banger after banger, all while sustaining a remarkable level of complexity and compassion for everyone in Jepsen’s solar system."[49]

Adam Downer of Cokemachineglow wrote a positive review, remarking "The result is a nearly anonymous album of stellar pop music, one where it seems all the attention was placed not on positioning Carly Rae as a cultural force, but on making sure Emotion makes you smile. In a year where pop stars fight for brand supremacy, sell personas, and get the most coverage from media outlets for their tweets, it's funny that the year's best pop album doesn’t once feature the singer talking about herself."[50] Peter Tabakis of Pretty Much Amazing gave the album a grade of A-, opining that "Emotion is an old fashioned eye-opener. It's the shiny birthday present stowed in a random closet, hidden in plain sight. It's also the best gift you never asked for, or even knew you wanted in the first place. That she succeeded in making a near-perfect pop album seems insane... Emotion is so good, it’s formed sky-high expectations out of thin air."[51] Corban Goble of Pitchfork rated the album 7.4/10, commenting "Emotion is as solid and spotless a pop album as you're likely to hear this year.... but Emotion fails to tell us who Jepsen is or wants to be."[1] Evan Sawdey of PopMatters gave the album 6/10 and said "Emotion is still a very pleasing album if not just a shade overambitious, clearly trying too hard to make the same genius pop moments that Kiss churned them out with effortless flair." Kevin Ritchie of Now Magazine gave the album 3/5, writing "For all its unexpected sounds and catchy choruses, Emotion falters in its lyrical blandness." Jon Caramanica of The New York Times gave the album 3/5, stating "Emotion is full of pure cotton candy--delicious, distractingly sweet and filling, with a mildly suspicious aftertaste.... [The album is] full of excellent songs that seem to give up about two-thirds of the way through. Jonh Bell of The Line of Best Fit gave the album a 7.5/10, commenting "Emotion has all the tenets of a successful pop record, but feels more cultivated than previous work." Stephen Carlick of Exclaim! gave the album a 8/10 and judged that "Emotion demonstrates how little improvement could be made on her sharp, consistent songwriting abilities. These are perfect pop songs; a few more rare glimpses of their rougher edges would make them all the more spectacular."

Dan Weiss of Spin gave the album a 8/10 and judged that "This is music for flash mobs, a valentine to crowdsourcing, and a public engagement proposal to the universe." James Rainis of Slant Magazine gave the album a four out of five stars, commenting "With an uncanny melodic gift that enlivens even the most tired sentiments and a chameleonic ability to seamlessly transition between disparate production styles, Jepsen proves she's worthy of those comparisons [to Taylor Swift and Rihanna]." Maura Johnston of The Boston Globe gave the album a 8/10, commenting "An album that’s incredibly enjoyable even as Jepsen stands on the precipice of heartache." Heather Phares of AllMusic gave the album a four out of five stars, commenting "An even more consistent album than Kiss, Emotion further defines Jepsen as an equally stylish and earnest pop artist."[39] Ryan Dennehy of AbsolutePunk gave the album a 8.5/10 and judged that "Emotion goes to great lengths to prove the advantages of being manufactured, with every piece interlocking with machine-like precision with its surroundings. It's astonishingly effective, and like the best pop, demands to be listened to ad nauseum in order to gawk at the sheer audacity of the accomplishment."[52] Penfold of I Probably Hate Your Band gave Emotion 7.5/10 and said it "sees CROJO cut her hair short, dump her boyfriend, throw out her wardrobe, and grow into the girl she always wanted to be. Set your Spotify to private, pop in those headphones, and waste an hour in an '80s dream. You will not be disappointed."[53] Annie Zaleski of The A.V. Club gave Emotion a grade B+ and said "Emotion will propel her to superstardom—but even if it doesn’t, she can at least rest easy knowing she made one of 2015’s most interesting, effervescent records."

Year-end lists

Critic/Publication List Rank Ref.
Entertainment Weekly The 40 Best Albums of 2015 2 [54]
People The 10 Best Albums of 2015 2 [55]
Stereogum The 50 Best Albums of 2015 3 [56]
Vice The 50 Best Albums of 2015 3 [57]
The Village Voice 2015 Pazz & Jop Critics' Poll 3 [58]
Time Top 10 Best Albums 4 [59]
Spin The 25 Best Pop Albums of 2015 4 [60]
The 50 Best Albums of 2015 22 [61]
Rolling Stone 20 Best Pop Albums of 2015 7 [62]
The 50 Best Albums of 2015 48 [63]
Slant Magazine The 25 Best Albums of 2015 12 [64]
The Guardian Best Albums of 2015 19 [65]
Billboard 25 Best Albums of 2015 24 [66]
Consequence of Sound The 50 Best Albums of 2015 24 [67]
Pitchfork Media The 50 Best Albums of 2015 34 [68]
NME NME's Albums of the Year 2015 36 [69]
Complex The Best Albums of 2015 41 [70]
NPR NPR Music's 50 Favorite Albums of 2015 N/A [71]
Brooklyn Magazine Best Albums of the Year N/A [72]

Commercial performance

Emotion debuted at number 16 on the US Billboard 200 chart with 16,153 equivalent album units. In Canada, the album debuted at number 8 with 2,600 copies sold in its first week. In Japan, the album debuted at number 8 with 12,189 physical copies sold its in first week. Due to widespread promotion, Emotion sold 65,200 additional copies the following three weeks in Japan. On April 2, 2016, Jepsen revealed via Twitter that Emotion was certified gold by the Recording Industry Association of Japan, having sold over 100,000 copies there.[73] The album entered the UK Albums Chart on September 25 at number 21 with sales of 4,150 copies in addition to streaming figures.[74]

Track listing

Standard edition[75]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Run Away with Me"  
4:11
2. "E•MO•TION"  
  • Jepsen
  • Nate Campany
  • Ben Romans
  • Christopher J Baran
  • Baran
  • Romans
3:17
3. "I Really Like You"  
  • Svensson
  • Jeff Halatrax
3:24
4. "Gimmie Love"  
  • Jepsen
  • Larsson
  • Fredriksson
  • Mattman & Robin
3:22
5. "All That"  
  • Rechtshaid
  • Hynes
4:38
6. "Boy Problems"  
  • Kurstin
3:42
7. "Making the Most of the Night"  
  • The High Street
3:58
8. "Your Type"  
  • Falk
  • Yacoub
3:19
9. "Let's Get Lost"  
  • Jepsen
  • Baran
  • Romans
  • Baran
  • Romans
3:13
10. "LA Hallucinations"  
  • Stint
  • Gray
3:04
11. "Warm Blood"  
  • Batmanglij
4:13
12. "When I Needed You"  
  • Rechtshaid
  • Nigro (additional)
3:41
Total length:
44:02

Personnel

Credits adapted from AllMusic[80]

Musicians

Technical personnel
  • Henrique Andrade — assistant engineer
  • C.J. Baran — instrumentation, production, programming
  • Christopher J. Baran — instrumentation, production, programming
  • Ajay Bhattacharyya — drum programming, engineer
  • Justin Bieberexecutive producer
  • Mikaelin Bluespruce — engineer
  • Mario Borgatta — mixing assistant
  • Scott "Scooter" BraunA&R, executive producer, project manager
  • Julian Burg — engineer
  • Greg Cart — marketing coordinator
  • Martin Cooke — assistant engineer
  • Rich Costeymixing
  • Tom Coynemastering
  • John Debold — assistant engineer
  • Lisa DiAngelo — publicity
  • Samuel Dixon — programming
  • John Ehmann — A&R
  • Micky Evelyn — assistant engineer
  • Eric Evlands — assistant engineer
  • Nicolas Fournier — assistant engineer
  • Chris Galland — assistant
  • Serban Ghenea — mixing
  • David Gray — A&R
  • Zachary Gray — engineer, production
  • Gene Grimaldi — mastering
  • Josh Gudwin — engineer
  • Pamela Gurley — legal advisor
  • Jeff Halatrax — engineer, production, programming
  • John Hanes — engineer, mixing engineer
  • Brad Haugen — creation, marketing
  • Laura Hess — marketing, project manager
  • Devonté Hynes — production, programming
  • Dyana Kass — marketing

  • Chris Kasych — engineer
  • Allison Kaye — project manager
  • Steve Kopee — project manager
  • Greg Kurstin — engineer, production
  • Evan Lamberg — A&R
  • Erik Madrid — mixing
  • Manny Marroquin — mixing
  • Mattman & Robin — production, programming
  • Kenny Meiselas — legal advisor
  • Scott Moore — engineer
  • Katherine Neis — A&R
  • Daniel Nigro — additional production, programming
  • Robert Orton — mixing
  • Alex Pasco — engineer
  • Ariel Rechtshaid — drum programming, engineer, production, programming
  • Ben Romans — instrumentation, production, programming
  • Ike Schultz — assistant
  • Wesley Seidman — engineer
  • Jessica Severa — art direction, design
  • Shellback — production
  • Laura Sisk — engineer
  • Stint — production
  • Peter Svensson — engineer, production, programming
  • Juan Carlos Torrado — assistant engineer
  • Randy Urbanski — engineer
  • Jaime Velez — assistant engineer
  • Robert Vosgien — mastering
  • Vincent Vu — mixing assistant
  • Con Weber — creation
  • Matthew Welch — photography
  • Rami Yacoub — instrumentation, production, programming
  • Olivia Zaro — A&R

Charts and certifications

Weekly charts

Chart (2015) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[81] 37
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[81] 59
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[81] 54
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[82] 8
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[81] 68
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[81] 73
Irish Albums (IRMA)[83] 29
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[84] 8
New Zealand Albums (Recorded Music NZ)[85] 35
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[81] 45
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[81] 93
Taiwanese Albums (G-Music)[86] 2
UK Albums (OCC)[87] 21
US Billboard 200[88] 16

Year-end charts

Chart (2015) Position
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[89] 55

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Japan (RIAJ)[90] Gold 100,000

*sales figures based on certification alone
^shipments figures based on certification alone

Release history

Region Date Edition Format Label Ref.
Japan June 24, 2015
  • Standard
  • deluxe
[6]
Worldwide August 21, 2015 [91]
[76][92][93][94]
Europe September 18, 2015 [95][96]

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