See Clear Now
See Clear Now |
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Studio album by Wiley |
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Released |
10 November 2008 |
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Genre |
R&B, electronic, grime, rap |
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Length |
34:48 |
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Label |
Asylum[1] |
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Producer |
Mark Ronson, Wiley, DaVinChe, Bless Beats, Jake Gosling, Mathias Wollo, P-Nut, Curtis Foss, Hot Chip, Arthur Baker, Peter Raeburn, Nick Foster and Adam Bushell |
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Wiley chronology |
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Singles from See Clear Now |
- "Wearing My Rolex"
Released: 5 May 2008
- "Summertime"
Released: 13 October 2008
- "Cash in My Pocket"
Released: 1 December 2008
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Professional ratings |
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Review scores |
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Source | Rating |
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PurelyHipHop | [2] |
The Guardian | [3] |
See Clear Now[4] is the fifth studio album by UK Grime artist Wiley. The album was released on 10 November 2008. It was originally set to be released as I See Clear on 13 October 2008.[5] The album features collaborations with electropop group Hot Chip, and DJ/producer Mark Ronson in "Cash in My Pocket" (contributing "a few trumpets... but it's not brass overload").[6] The album's first single, "Wearing My Rolex"[7] was succeeded by the single "Summertime"[5] on 22 September[8] and "Cash in My Pocket".
Background
Wiley describes See Clear Now as "[his] first pop album", explaining that he wants to "push boundaries" while also "stay[ing] in the charts by making tunes that connect with people. It's pop all the way from here".[7] He explained that he had wanted to work with Lily Allen since hearing her debut album Alright, Still, and that his collaboration with Hot Chip came about after the two acts performed a version of "Wearing My Rolex" at the 2008 Glastonbury Festival. He also expressed a desire to be "the male equivalent of Missy Elliott" in relation to blending pop appeal with musical innovation.[6]
Wiley disowns album
Subsequently Wiley has also disowned this album. He was "very angry" about the production on Cash in My Pocket and Summertime. He says that it is not his music and he didn't have creative control on the album, he left the studio to leave the others to work on the tracks.
He adds that people should listen to Race Against Time instead because it isn't commercial and he would have more artistic control.[9]
Track listing
References
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| Studio albums | |
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| Extra albums (EPs / Mixtapes) | |
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| Singles | |
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| Featured singles | |
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| Related articles | |
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