Electra Heart

Electra Heart
A close-up of a light-skinned blonde-haired woman with a small heart symbol located next to her left eye. The name "Marina and the Diamonds" is located above her picture, while the title "Electra Heart" is placed beneath her chin.
Studio album by Marina and the Diamonds
Released 27 April 2012
Recorded 2010–12
Genre Electropop
Length 46:51
Label
Producer
Marina and the Diamonds chronology
The Family Jewels
(2010)
Electra Heart
(2012)
Froot
(2015)
Singles from Electra Heart
  1. "Primadonna"
    Released: 20 March 2012
  2. "Power & Control"
    Released: 20 July 2012
  3. "How to Be a Heartbreaker"
    Released: 7 December 2012

Electra Heart is the second studio album by Welsh singer and songwriter Marina Diamandis, professionally known as Marina and the Diamonds. It was released on 27 April 2012 by 679 Artists and Atlantic Records. Diamandis collaborated with producers including Liam Howe, Greg Kurstin, Dr. Luke, Diplo, and StarGate during its recording, and subsequently transitioned from the new wave musical styles seen throughout her debut studio album The Family Jewels (2010). Their efforts resulted in a concept album inspired by electropop music, a distinct departure from her earlier projects; its lyrical content is united by the topics of love and identity. Diamandis created the titular character "Electra Heart" to represent female stereotypes in popular American culture.

Music critics were divided in their opinions of Electra Heart, expressing ambivalence towards Diamandis' shift in musical style and its overall production. The record debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 21,358 copies. In doing so, it became Diamandis' first chart-topping record there, although it was then distinguished as the lowest-selling number-one record of the 21st century in the country. The album was eventually certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry for exceeding shipments of 100,000 units. Electra Heart performed moderately on international record charts, including a peak position at number 31 on the US Billboard 200, and became Diamandis' highest-charting project in the United States at the time.

Electra Heart was supported by three singles, all of which were supplemented by music videos. "Primadonna" was released as the lead single from the record on 20 March 2012, and peaked at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart. Follow-up singles "Power & Control" and "How to Be a Heartbreaker" were respectively released on 20 July and 7 December, and reached numbers 193 and 88 in the United Kingdom. The record was additionally promoted by Diamandis' headlining The Lonely Hearts Club Tour, which visited Europe and North America from May 2012 through May 2013.

Background and production

"Electra Heart is the antithesis of everything that I stand for. And the point of introducing her and building a whole concept around her is that she stands for the corrupt side of American ideology, and basically that's the corruption of yourself. My worst fear—that's anyone's worst fear—is losing myself and becoming a vacuous person. And that happens a lot when you're very ambitious."

—Diamandis describing the concepts for Electra Heart and its titular character.[1]

After returning from the United States after the launch of her debut studio album The Family Jewels (2010), Diamandis considered creating a character which would become the centerpiece of her follow-up project. She commented that she was inspired by the "Tumblr generation" to photograph herself in several places across the United States, appearing as a different persona in each picture to mimick the anonymity of the "mini-stars of the internet".[2] The final product became "a cold, ruthless character who wasn't vulnerable",[3] which she later named "Electra Heart" and detailed as a tool to represent a combination of elements associated with the American Dream and Greek tragedy, and added that visuals would merge the differing concepts into a cohesive idea.[1]

Diamandis first announced Electra Heart in August 2011; it was initially planned to become a three-piece project inspired by American culture in the 1970s, although it eventually evolved into her second studio album.[1] Diamandis originally planned to release the record as a "side project" under an entity separate from Marina and the Diamonds, although her management disapproved.[4] The track "Living Dead" was the first recorded during its production, and approximately 22 songs were recorded for potential inclusion on the album.[5] She later commented that the record was dedicated to "dysfunctional love", elaborating that "rejection is a universally embarrassing topic and Electra Heart is my response to that."[6] Diamandis stated that Electra Heart was influenced by Madonna, Marilyn Monroe, and the French queen Marie Antoinette; she described Madonna as being "fearless" and felt that she showcased a desire to be a successful artist beyond fame and wealth.[7] Diamandis told Glamour that Britney Spears influenced a "double-sided" theme for the record of both "innocence" and "darkness".[8] She described the final product as being "a bit cringe" and reflective of her personal experiences, although noted that its promotional campaign would be "pink and fluffy".[7]

Composition

"Primadonna"
A sample of "Primadonna", a "surging" pop recording that incorporates an "anti-chorus structure"; the track received comparisons to the catalogues of Lykke Li and Coldplay.

"Power & Control"
A sample of "Power & Control", which incorporates prominent elements of electropop. Steve Angello from the electronic dance music group Swedish House Mafia co-wrote the song.

Problems playing these files? See media help.

Heavily inspired by electropop musical styles, Electra Heart has been described as a concept album detailing "female identity" and "a recent breakup".[9][10] It represents a musical departure from Diamandis' debut studio album The Family Jewels (2010), which incorporated a new wave and indie rock-influenced sonority.[11][12] She later commented that the album was specifically designed as a pop record to allow her to establish a greater prominence in the contemporary music industry.[4] The titular character "Electra Heart" portrays four female archetypes in the album: "Teen Idle", "Primadonna", "Homewrecker", and "Su-Barbie-A". Their presences on each track are not clearly defined, although Diamandis acknowledged that they are more apparent on the visual aspects of the album.[10]

Alexis Petridis from The Guardian compared the lyrical content used throughout the pop punk-inspired opener[10] "Bubblegum Bitch" to "the self-fulfilling I-will-be-huge prophecy" that was developed in The Fame by Lady Gaga.[13] The following track "Primadonna" is a pop number that contains a "surging beat" and an "anti-chorus structure",[14] which according to James Christopher Monger from AllMusic blends styles reminiscent of Swedish recording artist Lykke Li and the British band Coldplay.[15] "Lies" takes influence from elements of dubstep music.[16] Michael Cragg from BBC Music felt that it allowed Diamandis to "deal directly with her emotions", and opined that contributions from producer Diplo gave the song "extra gloom wobble sadness".[9] Cragg classified "Homewrecker" as a "vampy" track which blends verses centred around spoken-word vocals with a "stompy" refrain where Diamandis declares "I broke a million hearts just for fun",[9] while Christopher Will from the Pennsylvania State University-sponsored Blue Robot recognised elements of house music.[16] Cragg further opined that "Starring Role" was "heart-rending in its simplicity", and noticed prominent piano and drum instrumentation throughout the recording.[9]

Monger saw the sixth track "The State of Dreaming" as a solemn offering from the record for its intellectual lyrical content, which he described as one of several tracks that "reveal the lonely rebel, defiantly eating lunch alone, secretly wishing for acceptance."[15] "Power & Control" was detailed as an electropop track by Emily Mackay from The Quietus,[17] while Laura Snapes from Pitchfork Media commented that Diamandis repeatedly delivers the lyrics "I am weak" with an "increasingly ephemeral voice" as it progresses.[18] Snapes also felt that "Living Dead" was a more "vulnerable moment" from Electra Heart, and compared it to the "snappy [and] taut" works of English duo Soft Cell.[18] Monger recognised inspiration from American recording artist Lana Del Rey in "Teen Idle" and felt that it represented "the feral blood of an army of disenfranchised high-school loners coming into their own".[15] Bradley Stern from MuuMuse suggested that "The Valley of the Dolls" drew inspiration from the 1967 film of the same name, and described "Hypocrates" as a "sparkling guitar-pop tune" that takes stylistic influences from 1960s pop music and details the power struggle between romantic partners.[19] Electra Heart closes with its 12th track "Fear and Loathing", which experiments with electronic music styles;[20] Petridis made particular note of its minimal production, which according to him, places emphasis on Diamandis' "coolly enunciated and slightly folky" vocals.[13]

Release and promotion

On 1 March, Diamandis unveiled the album artwork for the standard version of Electra Heart, which depicts a blonde Diamandis wearing several hair rollers. The singer later revealed that because of the dye, her hair started to fall out, so she got a boy's haircut and wore a wig.[21] Becky Bain from Idolator complimented its "retro film stock look" and opined that it "is just a snapshot from some 1970s exploitation movie",[22] while Bradley Stern from MuuMuse jokingly referenced the album track "Homewrecker" when stating that she "looks like a proper Suzy Homemaker! (Or should I say Suzy Homewrecker?)"[23] The artwork for the deluxe version features the same picture of Diamandis, although it is tinted purple.[24] The track listing for the standard version was confirmed on 1 March,[25] while the track listing for the deluxe version was announced on 5 March.[26] A limited edition box set of Electra Heart contained the deluxe version of the record, four photo art cards, a ring, perspex, necklace, and pocket mirror.[24]

Music videos

A light-skinned woman with a brown-haired wig smiles while holding a microphone with both of her hands.
Diamandis on Sommarkrysset in Sweden, September 2012.

Diamandis released 11 music videos through YouTube during the promotional campaign for Electra Heart. She claimed that their production led her record label into bankruptcy, but stated that they would be released and "finish this era the way I want to."[27] The first, titled "Part 1: Fear and Loathing", was released on 8 August 2011, and sees Diamandis cutting her long brown hair and singing the track on a balcony during the nighttime.[28] It was followed by "Part 2: Radioactive" on 22 August, which depicts a blonde-wigged Diamandis travelling across the United States with her romantic interest.[29] The track was released through the iTunes Store on 23 September,[30] and peaked at number 25 on the UK Singles Chart on 15 October.[31] The black-and-white clip "Part 3: The Archetypes" shows the close-up of a blonde Diamandis while the introduction of "The State of Dreaming" is played; it introduced the archetypes "housewife", "beauty queen", "homewrecker", and "idle teen" on 15 December.[32][33] "Part 4: Primadonna" served as the music video for the lead single from the record on 12 March 2012.[34]

Uploaded on 18 May, the black-and-white "Part 5: Su-Barbie-A" is set to the introduction of "Valley of the Dolls" with overlapped commentary mentioning "Quick-Curl Barbie" and "Mod-Hair Ken"; it depicts Diamandis standing on the porch of a house with her back to the front door.[35] It was followed by "Part 6: Power & Control" on 30 May, where Diamandis is seen engaging in a series of mind games with her romantic interest.[36] Diamandis alleged that Atlantic Records delayed the premiere of "Part 7: How to Be a Heartbreaker" because they felt she was "ugly" in the clip;[37] it was made publicly available on 28 September, and sees Diamandis interacting with several shirtless men in a community shower.[38] "Part 8: E.V.O.L." introduced the previously-unreleased track "E.V.O.L" on 14 February 2013. The black-and-white visual shows a brown-wigged Diamandis looking about a room with white-tiled walls.[39]

"Part 9: The State of Dreaming", premiered on 2 March, presents Diamandis lying on a bed while "alternating between sad eyes and a big smile". It begins with a black-and-white filter, although transitions into color after the first minute.[40] It was followed by "Part 10: Lies" on 17 July, and employs a similar black-and-white to color technique. Diamandis is first seen looking into the camera wearing little makeup, and is later shown walking into the woods and sitting at a dinner table in the rain.[41] The final music video "Part 11: Electra Heart" introduced the previously-unreleased title track; the clip itself contains footage from the earlier music videos. It symbolically ended the promotional era for Electra Heart, with Diamandis having tweeted "Goodbye, Electra Heart!" on 8 August, the same day the video was released.[42]

Singles

Inspired by the six-single promotional campaign for Teenage Dream (2010) by Katy Perry, Diamandis planned to release six singles from Electra Heart, however, three tracks were released before she finished promoting the album.[43] "Primadonna" was announced as the lead single from the record on 13 March 2012,[34] and was released through the iTunes Store in the United States on 20 March.[44] Robert Copsey from Digital Spy spoke favourably of the track, complimenting its overall production and Diamandis' portrayal of its female archetype.[45] It peaked at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming Diamandis' fifth song to enter the top 40 in the United Kingdom.[46] "Power & Control" was released through the iTunes Store in the United Kingdom on 20 July 2012 and served as the second single from Electra Heart.[47] It peaked at number 193 on the UK Singles Chart.[48] In July 2012, it was announced that "How to Be a Heartbreaker" would be released as the second single in the United States and the third single in the United Kingdom. Diamandis commented that she had written the track while Electra Heart was being pressed in the United Kingdom, and consequently missed the cut-off for initial inclusion on the record; however, it was featured in the revised track listing for the American version.[49] The song was released through the iTunes Store on 7 December 2012,[50] and peaked at number 88 on the UK Singles Chart.[51]

Tour

In February 2012, Diamandis announced the launch of her headlining The Lonely Hearts Club Tour.[52] It ran alongside the Mylo Xyloto Tour headlined by Coldplay, for which Diamandis served as the supporting act.[53] The Lonely Hearts Club Tour was initially scheduled to begin on 4 May at the Manchester Cathedral in Manchester, although it was delayed after Diamandis sustained a vocal cord injury, and ultimately began on 18 June at The Waterfront in Norwich.[54] The American leg of the tour began on 10 July at The Fonda Theatre in Los Angeles,[55] while the tour itself ended on 29 May 2013 after a performance at the Rumsey Playfield in New York City.[56]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[15]
Clash1/10[57]
Drowned in Sound5/10[58]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[59]
The Guardian[13]
The Independent[60]
musicOMH[61]
NME5/10[62]
The Observer[63]
Pitchfork Media5.9/10[18]

At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Electra Heart received an average score of 57, which indicates "mixed or average reviews", based on 16 reviews.[64] Writing for AllMusic, James Christopher Monger compared the record to the works of American recording artists Kesha and Lady Gaga, and favourably summarised it as "a brooding, sexy, desperate, overwrought, and infectious record that's both aware and unashamed of its contrivance."[15] Michael Cragg reviewed the album on behalf of BBC Music; he felt that the recurring concept of failed romance established "a strange dichotomy" that created a sense of cohesiveness, and elaborated that it "[pulls] you sharply into her world." He considered the second half of the disc to be mildly disappointing, although concluded that this was excusable because the overall record "[balances] the ironic and the heartfelt, the quirky and the mainstream, the real and the fake with remarkable aplomb."[9] Tim Stack of Entertainment Weekly complimented Diamandis for her ability to "rival Katy Perry for catchy hooks, command with the swagger of Gwen Stefani, and even come close to the ethereal vocal exhilaration of Florence Welch." Stack opined that Electra Heart was a healthy combination of up-tempo recordings and genuinely-delivered ballads, and placed additional praise on the female archetypes explored throughout the album.[59]

The Guardian writer Alexis Petridis was confident that "there's clearly an interesting pop star" emerging from Diamandis, but suggested that her creativity was restricted by the heavy integration of alter egos and an implied determination for commercial success, which he commented failed to reflect Diamandis' inventiveness.[13] Simon Price from The Independent accepted that the record was "too professional to be truly terrible", although noted that Diamandis' revamped public image as a "British Katy Perry" lacked ingenuity.[60] NME columnist Priya Elan summarised the album as an "expensive-sounding failure" that suffered from its lack of decisiveness.[62] Writing for Pitchfork Media, Laura Snapes questioned the decision of creating the "Electra Heart" character for the record, and suggested that it was unnecessary. She elaborated that "duller and more unbearable" tracks were unavoidable, and expressed particular disappointment because she thought that Electra Heart could have become "one of the year's most acclaimed pop albums."[18] Representing The Observer, Kitty Empire assumed that Diamandis' collaborations with Dr. Luke and Greg Kurstin were evidence of "a big label push". She compared the disc to the works of Perry and Britney Spears, although felt that Lana Del Rey was more successful in embodying the themes of "love, identity, femininity and America" than Diamandis' generic production values allowed.[63] Emily Mackay from The Quietus criticised the songs' titles for being lackluster, which she sarcastically stated caused listeners "physical pain", and was disappointed that the character "Electra Heart" was a scapegoat for expressing "all the worst parts of Marina Diamandis that she didn't want to become."[17] The harshest review came from the magazine Clash, with George Boorman writing, "'Electra heart' is an ingloriously languid statement of Marina's demise, the final stamp of disapproval on her flailing excuse of a musical career. There is actually a song called 'Bubblegum Bitch' on this album. 'nuff said."[57]

Commercial performance

"It's been so instant that I've come over [in the United States] and sold out my tour and I've never really done that before. People are getting the humour. It's such a relief to be here for six weeks because it feels effortless. When I first changed [musical direction] people said, 'She's sold out' and they totally didn't get the humour. It's a tongue-in-cheek record but it also deals with the truth about love and commercialism and just being a young person, really."

—Diamandis describing the differing reactions to Electra Heart in the United Kingdom and the United States.[65]

Electra Heart debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 21,358 copies.[66] It became Diamandis' first chart-topping album in the United Kingdom,[67] although it was additionally distinguished as the lowest-selling number-one record of the 21st century in the country.[66] It was later surpassed by Write It on Your Skin (2012) by Newton Faulkner, which debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 16,647 copies.[66] On 15 April 2016, Electra Heart was certified gold by the British Phonographic Industry for exceeding shipments of 100,000 units in the United Kingdom.[68] The record additionally reached number one on both the Irish Albums Chart and the Scottish Albums Chart;[69][70] it was recognised with a gold certification in the former territory.[71]

Electra Heart performed moderately on additional record charts in Europe. The record peaked at number 11 on the Swiss Hitparade,[72] and reached number 17 on the German Media Control Charts.[73] It charted at number 25 on the Ö3 Austria Top 40,[74] number 30 on the Norwegian VG-lista,[75] and number 41 on the Swedish Sverigetopplistan.[76] The album reached the lower ends of the Dutch MegaCharts and the Belgian Ultratop in Wallonia, respectively peaking at numbers 92 and 132 in each region.[77][78] However, it reached number 31 on the Official New Zealand Music Chart and number 32 on the Australian ARIA Charts in Oceania.[79][80]

Electra Heart debuted at number 31 on the US Billboard 200,[81] and reached number two on the Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums component chart.[82] It has sold 129,000 copies in the US as of March 2015.[83] Elsewhere in North America, the record peaked at number 50 on the Canadian Albums Chart.[84] In August 2012, Diamandis commented that she believed consumers in the United Kingdom had misinterpreted her comical effort with a perceived abandonment of her original musical inspiration, thus resulting in a relative underperformance in the country.[65] In contrast, she felt that her American audience was more receptive of Electra Heart and her evolving public image.[65]

Track listing

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Electra Heart.[85]

Electra Heart – Standard version[86]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Bubblegum Bitch"  
  • Nowels
  • Dean Reid[a]
2:34
2. "Primadonna"   3:41
3. "Lies"  
3:46
4. "Homewrecker"  
  • Diamandis
  • Nowels
Nowels 3:22
5. "Starring Role"  
Kurstin 3:27
6. "The State of Dreaming"  
  • Diamandis
  • Devrim Karaoğlu
  • Nowels
  • Nowels
  • Karaoğlu
3:36
7. "Power & Control"  
Kurstin 3:46
8. "Living Dead"  
  • Diamandis
  • Kurstin
Kurstin 4:04
9. "Teen Idle"  DiamandisLiam Howe 4:14
10. "Valley of the Dolls"  
  • Diamandis
  • Karaoğlu
  • Nowels
  • Nowels
  • Karaoğlu
4:13
11. "Hypocrates"  
  • Diamandis
  • Nowels
  • Nowels
  • Karaoğlu
4:01
12. "Fear and Loathing"  DiamandisHowe 6:07
Total length:
46:51
Electra Heart – Deluxe version (bonus tracks)[24]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
13. "Radioactive"   3:47
14. "Sex Yeah"  
  • Diamandis
  • Kurstin
Kurstin 3:46
15. "Lonely Hearts Club"   3:01
16. "Buy the Stars"  DiamandisHowe 4:47
Total length:
62:12
Notes

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Electra Heart.[85]

  • Marina Diamandis – vocals (all tracks); piano (tracks 9, 12, 16)
  • Rusty Anderson – electric guitar (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11); bouzouki (track 10)
  • Casper Balslev – photography
  • Big Active – layout
  • Tim Blacksmith – executive producer, Stargate management (track 13)
  • David Campbell – string arrangements, string conducting (tracks 6, 10)
  • Matt Chamberlain – drums (track 11)
  • Dan Chase – keyboards (tracks 1, 4); bass, drums, programming (track 4)
  • DJ Chuckie – all instruments, production (track 13)
  • Cirkut – all instruments, production, programming (tracks 2, 3)
  • Danny D. – executive producer, Stargate management (track 13)
  • Diplo – additional programming, co-production (track 3)
  • Dr. Luke – all instruments, production, programming (tracks 2, 3)
  • The Elite – additional drum production, additional drum programming (track 9)
  • Mikkel S. Eriksen – all instruments, engineering (track 13)
  • Kat Garbutt – management
  • Serban Ghenea – mixing (tracks 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 14)
  • Clint Gibbs – engineering (tracks 2, 3)
  • Matty Green – mixing assistant (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)
  • John Hanes – mix engineering (tracks 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 14)
  • Tor Erik Hermansen – all instruments (track 13)
  • Liam Howe – mixing, production (tracks 9, 12, 16); Philicorda, santoor (track 9); synthesiser (tracks 9, 12); Mellotron, programming, telegraph keyboards (track 12)
  • John Ingoldsby – additional engineering (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)
  • Lambrini Kaklamani – additional vocals (track 12)
  • Devrim Karaoğlu – drums, keyboards, production, programming (tracks 6, 10, 11); strings (track 6); bass (tracks 10, 11)
  • Greg Kurstin – keyboards, production, programming (tracks 5, 7, 8, 14); engineering (tracks 5, 7, 14); piano (track 5); bass, guitar (tracks 7, 8, 14)
  • Fabian Lenssen – additional assistant engineering, all instruments, engineering, production (track 13)
  • Damien Lewis – additional assistant engineering (track 13)
  • Nigel Lundemo – additional engineering (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)
  • Derek Mackillop – management
  • Ryan McMahon – all instruments, engineering, production, programming (track 15)
  • Kieron Menzies – engineering (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)
  • Katie Mitzell – production co-ordination (tracks 2, 3)
  • Rick Nowels – keyboards, production (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11); electric guitar (track 4); piano (tracks 6, 11)
  • Charlie Paakkari – string engineering (tracks 6, 10)
  • Dan Parry – mixing (track 15)
  • Tim Pierce – electric guitar (tracks 1, 6, 11)
  • Ryan Rabin – all instruments, engineering, production, programming (track 15)
  • Dean Reid – bass, co-production, drums, engineering, keyboards (track 1); electric guitar (tracks 1, 6)
  • Irene Richter – production co-ordination (tracks 2, 3)
  • Tim Roberts – assistant mix engineering (tracks 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 14)
  • Phil Seaford – assistant mix engineering (tracks 2, 3, 5, 7, 8, 14)
  • Jesse Shatkin – additional engineering (tracks 5, 7, 14)
  • Jon Sher – assistant engineering (tracks 2, 3)
  • Stargate – production (track 13)
  • Mark 'Spike' Stent – mixing (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)
  • Phil Tan – mixing (track 13)
  • Miles Walker – engineering (track 13)
  • Trevor Yasuda – assistant engineering (tracks 1, 4, 6, 10, 11)

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2012) Peak
position
scope="row" Australian Albums (ARIA)[80] 32
scope="row" Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[74] 25
scope="row" Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[78] 132
scope="row" Canadian Albums (Billboard)[84] 50
scope="row" Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[77] 92
scope="row" German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[73] 17
scope="row" Irish Albums (IRMA)[69] 1
scope="row" New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[79] 31
scope="row" Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[75] 30
scope="row" Scottish Albums (OCC)[70] 1
scope="row" Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[76] 41
scope="row" Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[72] 11
scope="row" UK Albums (OCC)[90] 1
scope="row" US Billboard 200[81] 31
scope="row" US Dance/Electronic Albums (Billboard)[82] 2

Year-end charts

Chart (2012) Position
UK Albums (OCC)[91] 155
US Dance/Electronic Albums (Billboard)[92] 24
Chart (2013) Position
US Dance/Electronic Albums (Billboard)[93] 14

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Ireland (IRMA)[71] Gold 7,500
United Kingdom (BPI)[68] Gold 100,000

^shipments figures based on certification alone
xunspecified figures based on certification alone

Release history

Country Date Version Format Label Ref.
Ireland 27 April 2012
  • Standard
  • deluxe
[94]
United Kingdom 30 April 2012
[86]
Sweden 2 May 2012
  • Standard
  • deluxe
Warner Music [95]
Portugal 6 May 2012 [96]
Spain [96]
Austria 11 May 2012 [96]
Greece 14 May 2012 [96]
Russia [96]
Australia 18 May 2012 [97]
New Zealand [96]
Switzerland [96]
Italy 22 May 2012 [98]
Germany 25 May 2012 [99]
Netherlands [100]
Poland 18 June 2012 [101]
Brazil Digital download [102]
Canada 10 July 2012
  • CD
  • digital download
[103]
United States
  • Standard
  • deluxe
  • box set
[104]
Brazil 11 July 2012 Standard CD Warner Music [102]
Australia 30 October 2015 Vinyl [105]
United Kingdom
  • 679
  • Atlantic
United States
  • Atlantic
  • Elektra

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 Robinson, Peter (7 August 2011). "Marina & The Diamonds interview". Popjustice. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  2. "Hollywood pop". The Irish Times. 13 April 2012. Archived from the original on 29 September 2013. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  3. "Marina and the Diamonds: 'My new album is an ode to dysfunctional love'". NME. 6 April 2012. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  4. 1 2 Daniels, Colin (15 January 2013). "Marina and the Diamonds: "Electra Heart was originally a side project"". Digital Spy. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  5. Davidson-Vidavski, Doron (16 March 2012). "Interview: Marina & The Diamonds". Notion. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  6. Morgan, Clive (12 April 2012). "Exclusive: Marina and the Diamonds premieres Lies music video". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  7. 1 2 "Marina and the Diamonds: 'Electra Heart is inspired by Madonna, Marilyn Monroe, Marie Antoinette'". NME. 13 April 2012. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  8. Wodds, Mickey (14 March 2013). "Exclusive: Marina & the Diamonds' "Heartbreaker" Is on Glee Tonight. Plus, She Shares Her Obsessions With Us!". Glamour. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 Cragg, Michael. "Marina and the Diamonds Electra Heart Review". BBC Music. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  10. 1 2 3 Levine, Nick (26 April 2012). "Marina Diamandis releases cathartic concept album". The National. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
  11. Petridis, Alexis (18 February 2010). "Marina and the Diamonds: The Family Jewels". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  12. "The Family Jewels – Marina and the Diamonds". AllMusic. Retrieved 9 May 2014.
  13. 1 2 3 4 Petridis, Alexis (26 April 2012). "Marina and the Diamonds: Electra Heart – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 25 April 2014.
  14. Stern, Bradley. "MuuMuse Approved: Marina And The Diamonds – "Primadonna"". MuuMuse. Retrieved 18 May 2014.
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