The New Classic

The New Classic
Studio album by Iggy Azalea
Released 21 April 2014 (2014-04-21)
Recorded 2012–13
Genre Hip hop[1]
Length 42:03
Label
Producer
Iggy Azalea chronology
  • The New Classic
  • (2014)
Singles from The New Classic
  1. "Work"
    Released: 17 March 2013
  2. "Bounce"
    Released: 27 May 2013
  3. "Change Your Life"
    Released: 12 September 2013
  4. "Fancy"
    Released: 17 February 2014
  5. "Black Widow"
    Released: 8 July 2014

The New Classic is the debut studio album by Australian rapper Iggy Azalea. It was released on 21 April 2014, by Def Jam Recordings in United States, Virgin EMI in United Kingdom and affiliated record labels in other countries. Azalea came to prominence, after releasing her debut mixtape Ignorant Art and subsequently aligning herself with American rapper T.I. and his Hustle Gang imprint. Azalea first mentioned plans for the album in December 2011, but after numerous delays and label conflicts, Azalea eventually secured herself a record contract through Island Def Jam Music Group (now defunct). Though generally categorized as a hip hop album, The New Classic also incorporates elements of other genres, such as EDM, dance-pop and trap music in its production.

The album debuted inside the top five of several charts worldwide, and produced five singles. The album's lead single, "Work", performed well commercially, charting at number 17 in the UK charts and also eventually charting in Australia and the United States. The second single, "Bounce", saw a similar success in the United Kingdom, peaking at number 13. The third single, "Change Your Life", peaked at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, her first UK Top 10 single, and also made appearances in the Australian Top 50 singles (Azalea's first to do so) and on New Zealand and US charts. The fourth single, "Fancy" featuring British singer Charli XCX was an international success, reaching the top-five in Australia and the United Kingdom, and peaking at number one in New Zealand, the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States and the Canadian Hot 100. The fifth single, "Black Widow" featuring British singer Rita Ora, peaked at number 4 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming her highest charting single as a lead artist on that chart, and also peaked at number 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. It won the Breakthrough Artist Release at the 2014's ARIA Music Awards and Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Album at the 2014 American Music Awards.

The album also garnered Azalea four Grammy Award nominations for Best New Artist, Record of the Year and Best Pop Duo/Group Performance for "Fancy" and Best Rap Album at the 57th Grammy Awards. The New Classic has been reissued in a repackaged version, titled Reclassified, as of November 2014.

Background

After releasing her first full-length project, a mixtape Ignorant Art (2011) and a music video for a song titled "Pu$$y" that went viral, Iggy Azalea found prominence in the music industry and went on to become both the first female and first non-American rapper selected for hip hop magazine XXL's annual Top 10 Freshman cover issue.[2] The major attention led to negotiations for a record deal with Interscope Records.[2] In December 2011, in an interview, Azalea revealed her debut album's title to be The New Classic and that she had hopes of releasing it in the first quarter of 2012.[3] She also stated she would be signing to a major record label "soon and once that's sorted out and I establish an over all sound and direction for the album, I will be able to know what artists would make for a dynamic collaboration".[3]

Azalea later explained the concept behind her debut album's title: "I think people think of classic and they think of a Nas record or a Jay Z record or The Chronic, what makes something classic is when you hear it and you have that moment that is a time capsule. When I say 'The New Classic,' I just want to make records that give you that moment for fans that they can remember where they were when they heard it."[4]

Development

"I think some people think I'm like anti-label and I'm not. I just wanted to sign a deal when the time was right. I'm anti being shot out of a rocket when you're not ready and the songs and image aren't there. I think labels are skipping on the whole development side of an artist so you have to do it yourself these days. I wasn't ready to make an album last year, but now we've taken our time with everything the timing feels right."

 — Azalea discussing her stance on signing to a major record label.[5]

In January 2012, Azalea announced via Twitter, that she had struck a deal with Jimmy Iovine resulting in her being signed to Interscope Records.[6] Azalea went on to state: "Interscope, if you were wondering [...] Get used to me + jimmy smashing [shit], cause thats the plan".[7] However, in the following weeks she announced to MTV News, that American rapper T.I. had contacted her in relation to working with her as an executive producer of her upcoming album, although T.I. later stated it was Azalea who had asked him to be part of the record.[6]

Both T.I. and Azalea discussed their encounter to MTV News, in which Azalea claimed that he reached out to work with her, and she "found a position for him", T.I. recalled their first conversation in which she told him "it's very smart of you to call me because I'm going to be smashing shit for quite some time".[6] In March 2012, T.I. announced he signed Iggy Azalea to Grand Hustle Records.[8][9] In May 2012, it was confirmed by T.I., on MTV's HipHopPov, that Azalea had not yet secured distribution for her deal with Grand Hustle Records, and was described by T.I. as a "free agent". It was later revealed in the interview that she was in negotiations with labels other than Interscope and possibly Def Jam (wherein Bu Thiam, whom of which originally placed a bid to sign her, is VP of A&R).[10] In an interview with Interview magazine, Azalea clarified her move from Interscope Records to Grand Hustle Records, she called the signing "very impersonal" feeling that she "was a product" and after meeting T.I. she felt that he cared and understood her as a rap artist rather than her commercial viability.[2] Azalea worried that if she was to make a mistake with her career that Interscope Records would not support her, and she felt that being signed to the label was for commercial reasons rather than artistic.[2]

On 13 February 2013, it was announced Azalea had signed a record deal with Mercury Records.[11] Despite announcing she was part of T.I.'s Grand Hustle imprint, it was then confirmed that she had signed a deal with Island Def Jam Music Group, she announced via Twitter: "Hey world. I signed to island def jam. Iam now mercury UK/ island def jam USA awesome!!!!".[12] It was then stated that her deal with Interscope was never finalized and that she was only affiliated with Grand Hustle Records, and Azalea clarified her affiliation with the label saying: "That doesn't mean I'm not in hustle gang. Save it. Still in it. Still on the hustle gang album. Friendship doesn't require contracts".[12] Chris Anokute a Senior Vice President of Island Def Jam, later welcomed her to the record label tweeting: "Congrats Iggy. You have a voice that needs to be heard. We got your back".[12] In an interview with Blare magazine, Azalea explained that Island Def Jam made her feel more confident as a musician, and she felt less pressure from them as a company.[13]

Recording and production

American rapper T.I., who is also Azalea's mentor, appears as a featured artist on the album.

In an interview with 16Bars.TV (released in 2013), Azalea revealed that although she is still signed to T.I.'s Grand Hustle imprint, he would no longer be executive producer of her debut album: "He's actually not, anymore," Azalea said when asked about T.I.'s role. "He was going to be, but originally...all the records that I had on Glory [EP] were supposed to be on The New Classic, and he executive produced what ended up being Glory."[14] Azalea said that artistically, both she and T.I. agreed that she needed to go in a different direction with her debut: "As I was making it, I felt like, 'This isn't The New Classic; this is something else. It's not the right sound.' Not that it sounded bad, but it wasn't what The New Classic is in my head. And he executive produced that, and that went good, it was an experience, but after, he said and I said, it's better if I just make my own music away [from him] because sometimes being around him, it influences the music I make to be a bit too much of a different sound, and so for that reason he's not going to be [executive producing]. But not because I don't love him, because I love him."[14] Azalea also said she would be working with producers such as Diplo, Steve Aoki and Flosstradamus on the album, which she said she began working with earlier in December.[14]

In February 2012, Azalea premiered a song titled "Picture Me Rollin", performing it in Los Angeles in Dim Mak Studio. The song, which was set to be included on the album, was produced by Canadian record producer Boi-1da.[15] In April 2012, Azalea revealed she had collaborated with R&B singer Trey Songz: "I did do a song with Trey Songz that's kind of unexpected," she told The Boombox. "The beat, and the way he sings, it's kind of different [from] his regular style. I'm going to put that out, probably before the album." The album, which at the time set to be an Interscope Records release, would represent her different sides: "Some stuff is very base-driven, stripped down, more southern-sounding. Then other stuff is more mood and closer to my ignorant [side]," shared Azalea. "I kind of like have two different zones. It's ratchet, then introspective, I guess. Those are the two sounds, and I'm trying to glue all the things together, and find things that will make it cohesive."[16]

In 2012, Azalea later mentioned the collaborations with Cee-Lo Green and Pusha T, would probably make it to the album's final tracklist.[17] She had also revealed hopes of a collaboration with Missy Elliott, stating: "working with her is definitely something that I'm going to try to do before I put The New Classic out."[18] In December 2012, via her Twitter feed, Azalea revealed she would be remaking a song titled "Home Town Hatred", for the album.[19] In December 2012, Azalea confirmed Tyga and Rita Ora, as possible features that will be included on the album.[20] On 13 March 2013, after she released the music video for the lead single "Work", it was reported Azalea was working on her debut album in the United Kingdom.[21]

Composition

During her headlining European tour in December, Azalea spoke on the album's composition: "It's going to be similar to TrapGold and that will be very electronic and high-energy but I'm gonna talk more about my story and where I'm from and things about myself because I never really say that, I don't tell you too much about me, it's kind of just talking a lot of shit. It's what I really do, like energy and dance... but I do wanna touch on who I am and tell my story because I feel like I have a really interesting story and a lot of people don't know that because a lot of people don't see the interviews and I would like to put it in my music that I've been waiting for the right time for something that I feel like people will hear in the right platform and I think it will be this album so the near future will just be trying to tell my story in that album next year."[22] In an interview with Billboard, released in August 2013, Azalea described the album as "fairly electronic, like moombahton mixed with hip hop".[23]

Release and promotion

On 27 September 2011, Azalea released her debut mixtape Ignorant Art, saying she made it "with the intent to make people question and redefine old ideals".[24] On 30 July 2012, she released a free extended play (EP) titled Glory.[25] On 27 January 2012, Azalea confirmed she had finally signed to Interscope Records and her debut album The New Classic, which would be released in June 2012, with a debut single (which preceding in March 2012).[26] On 11 October 2012, Azalea released her second mixtape, TrapGold. TrapGold features the new direction Azalea began to go with her music at the time.[27]

During January and February 2013, Azalea was the supporting act for British singer-songwriter Rita Ora's Radioactive Tour in the United Kingdom.[28] During March 2013, Azalea was the supporting act for American rapper Nas, on his Life Is Good concert tour in the United Kingdom. In June 2013, Azalea stated she had completed the album and it was set to be released in September 2013.[29] On 8 August 2013 Azalea unveiled the album's tentative track-listing, which included neither "Work" nor "Bounce".[30] During an October 2013 interview, Azalea talked about the album's release date:

"The official date? [Fucked] if I know! It's done, it's so depressing to say this but it's the beginning of March, it's so far away but I just have to accept that. It was supposed to be October but obviously I'm going on tour with Beyoncé and they said I'm not allowed to put an album out while I'm on tour because I'll be trapped in Australia and I won't be able to do any TV appearances and I thought that's fair enough, that's three weeks and then they said 'You can't put an album out around Christmas time, that's a bad time' and I said 'What about January?' 'Well nobody gets back off holidays and then it's the Brit Awards, you can't release an album, it's terrible for marketing' which brings me to February. The marketing team gets to control me unfortunately, I don't get to control that."[31]
Azalea performing "Fuck Love" at the ACL Music Festival in October 2014

During October and November 2013, Azalea was the supporting act for American singer-songwriter Beyoncé's The Mrs. Carter Show World Tour in Australia.[32][33] On 8 January 2014, in promotion for her album, Azalea released a freestyle over "Animal Noise", which was produced by EDM producer Bro Safari.[34] On 26 January 2014, during an interview at the 56th Annual Grammy Awards, Azalea announced that The New Classic would be released on 14 April 2014.[35]

On 26 February 2014, in an interview with Los Angeles radio station Power 106, Azalea spoke on her long-awaited and often-delayed album: "In a way I'm very glad that it has taken a long time, because I've had so many experiences and I really feel like the last two years have been fast-forwarded and I had just so many different things happen to me that's been a lot of great things to write about..."[36]

The album became available for pre-order 10 March 2014, along with an instant gratification track, "Fancy" or "Impossible Is Nothing", depending on the country.[37] The album was officially released on 21 April in the United Kingdom,[38] 22 April in the United States[39] and 25 April in Australia.[40]

Tour

Main article: The New Classic Tour

To promote the album, Azalea announced a 14-date North American tour kicking off on 23 April in Boston and stopping in major cities including Detroit, Chicago, New York, Atlanta, and Los Angeles, wrapping 22 May in Seattle. She also planned to tour festivals throughout the summer.[41]

Singles

"Work"
A sample of "Work" by Iggy Azalea, serviced as the lead single from The New Classic.

"Bounce"
A sample of "Bounce" by Iggy Azalea, serviced as the second single from The New Classic.

Problems playing these files? See media help.

Azalea released "Work", her commercial debut single on 17 March 2013. The song, produced by 1st Down and The Invisible Men, serves as the album's lead single.[42][43] It was described as a subdued trap-meets-snap tune about Azalea's peculiar coming-of-age as a model who came to America in her teens before trying her hand at rap ("no money / no family / 16 in the middle of Miami").[44] Commercially the song performed well, charting within the top twenty in the UK charts and within the top three of the UK R&B charts, as well as managing to chart in Australia, Ireland and Scotland. The music video for the song was shot in the last week of February 2013 and premiered 13 March 2013, on VEVO.[45] Directed by Jonas & François, the video "is all trailer park elegance, dive bar lap dances, and a bit of 'Bad Girls'-inspired ridin' around and/or gettin' it".[44] Azalea revealed the inspirations for the visuals included Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert, Tarantino's Death Proof and the music video for Outkast's "B.O.B.".[46] On 17 July 2013, MTV announced Azalea's "Work" video had been nominated for the "Artist To Watch" category at the 2013 MTV Video Music Awards.[47] In 2014, "Work" received a resurgence in popularity in the United States, following Azalea's simultaneous success with The New Classic, "Fancy" and "Problem".[48] It re-entered Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles at a position of number three on 10 May 2014,[49] before entering the Billboard Hot 100 at number 88, and re-entering at a new peak of number 24 on Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs the week after.[50] "Work" also debuted at number 14 on Billboard Hot Rap Songs for the week ending 17 May 2014, marking Azalea's second top 20 hit on that chart.[51]

The second single released in anticipation of the album was "Bounce", which premiered on BBC Radio 1 on 26 April 2013.[52] The song was released via digital distribution on 27 May 2013.[53] The music video for "Bounce" was filmed in April 2013 in Mumbai and premiered 6 May 2013, on VEVO.[54][55] The video, which was directed by BRTHR Films, is Bollywood-themed.[56][57][58] "Bounce" served as the album's second single in Europe and Australia, while "Change Your Life", was released as the second single in North America. The song charted at number 13 on the UK Singles Chart. "Bounce" also received positive reviews from critics, who deemed it Azalea's most commercial song to date, "[Azalea] pairs the fiery raps for which she gained popularity with a club-friendly house beat that's the most commercial thing we've heard from her to date — more so even than the trappy 'Work.'"

In May 2013, in an interview with Rap-Up, after Azalea revealed she was no longer signed to Grand Hustle Records, she announced the album's third single would be titled "Change Your Life" and would feature T.I.[59] She also revealed the melodic song finds her singing for the first time.[59] "It's a big record," said Azalea of the single.[59] "I think it will be good to have T.I. on that single and just show that we're together, we're still family. It's definitely not me trying to make my silent exit from Hustle Gang."[59] "Change Your Life" premiered on BBC Radio 1Xtra on 19 August 2013. It was later released via digital distribution on 13 October.[60][61] The song peaked at number 10 on the UK Singles Chart, becoming her highest-charting single on that chart at the time.

On 5 December 2013, an unfinished song by Azalea, which surfaced with the title "Leave It" and the tag "produced by DJ Mustard", was leaked online.[62][63][64] Azalea later revealed the song was in fact produced by The Invisible Men & The Arcade, who she collaborated with on the entire album.[65] On 5 February 2014, Azalea announced that she would be releasing a new single titled "Fancy", featuring English singer-songwriter Charli XCX, later that week.[66] The song was premiered on BBC Radio 1 Xtra at 7PM GMT on 6 February 2014. After the song's premiere, it was revealed "Fancy" was the song that had leaked titled "Leave It".[67] On 17 February 2014, the song was serviced to urban contemporary radio in the United Kingdom as the album's fourth single and became her highest charting song to date.[68] The music video for "Fancy", inspired by the 1995 American comedy film Clueless was released on 4 March.[69] Thanks to "Fancy" and "Problem", in which she is the featured artist, Azalea joined The Beatles as the only acts to rank at numbers one and two simultaneously with their first two Hot 100 hits.[70] Moreover, Azalea passes Lil' Kim as the female rapper with the longest-leading #1 on the Billboard Hot 100[71] and moves into a tie for fifth place among lead women who have scored the longest commands on the Hot 100 this decade.[72]

On 26 February 2014, in an interview with Los Angeles radio station Power 106, Azalea revealed that the next single from the album would be a song written by her and Katy Perry, featuring an undisclosed female artist,[36] who was later revealed to be Rita Ora on "Black Widow", when the official track-listing was unveiled on 10 March 2014.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[73]
CuepointA–[74]
Entertainment WeeklyB–[75]
The Guardian[76]
The Independent[77]
NME4/10[78]
Q[79]
Rolling Stone[80]
Slant Magazine[81]
Spin4/10[82]

The New Classic received generally mixed reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 100, it received an average score of 56, based on 26 reviews.[83] Simon Vozick-Levinson of Rolling Stone said Azalea gives the songs "the kind of shamelessly poppy hooks that make Top 40 programmers giggle in delight and 'real hip-hop' heads shake theirs sadly. If this is the future, it's one strange place."[80] Tshepo Mokoena of The Guardian felt the album "barely resembles the west coast hip-hop Azalea idolised and imitated when developing her voice, and sits somewhere between EDM, dance-pop and trap music. Azalea can still spit out rapid-fire verses, but this album feels less forward-thinking than her 2011 Ignorant Art mixtape."[76] Spin magazine's Alfred Soto said he hears "few indications in The New Classic of ambition existing apart from the itch for celebrity".[82] Joe Sweeney from Slant Magazine said, "The New Classic mistakenly tries to frame Azalea as hip-hop's newest can't-miss egomaniac, focusing on the riches instead of the far more interesting rags."[81] Slant Magazine also named The New Classic as one of the worst albums of 2014.[84] Ray Rahman of Entertainment Weekly found its high-quality singles overshadowed by "undercooked, overstudied 'urban radio' and 'EDM' filler",[75] while Q called Azalea a faux rebel who follows convention, despite an occasional catchy song.[79]

In a positive review for Cuepoint, Robert Christgau argued that while Azalea may never demonstrate a powerful, soulful, or attractively melodic delivery, her "striving Australian-Atlantan cadence" is original and carries every song.[74] He deemed The New Classic "plenty authentic -- and damn good to boot" while dismissing Azalea's media naysayers: "predictably, the songs where she expresses wonderment that 'Impossible Is Nothing' are more relatable than the ones where she flaunts her liquid assets. But the ones where she pledges to keep on striving are more relatable than that, because striving is built into her flow itself. That's what her complexity is about."[85] Phil Johnson from The Independent called it "an instantly engaging showcase of the 23-year-old Aussie's talents – poppy without diluting her fierce-flowing charisma."[86] Kellan Miller of XXL said despite some poor songs near the end of the record, it is "a persuasive indicator that Iggy Azalea will be around for the long haul."[87]

Accolades

The New Classic was named one of the best hip-hop albums of the year by XXL on a list published on 30 June 2014, adding that "the album proved to a gang of skepts who doubted Iggy's controversial style from the start that she was more than capable of making hip-hop tracks with a pop appeal."[1] It was placed at number twenty-five on Digital Spy's top albums of 2014[88] and listed among Fuse's 40 best albums of 2014.[89] The album won the Breakthrough Artist Release award at the 2014 ARIA Music Awards[90] and Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Album at the 2014 American Music Awards, beating out Drake's Nothing Was the Same and Eminem's The Marshall Mathers LP 2.[91] It received a nomination for Best Rap Album at the 57th Grammy Awards.[92] The album was also up for Top Rap Album at the 2015 Billboard Music Awards.[93]

Year Ceremony Category Result
2014 American Music Awards Favorite Rap/Hip-Hop Album Won
ARIA Music Awards Breakthrough Artist Release Won
Best Urban Album Nominated
2015 Grammy Awards Best Rap Album Nominated
Billboard Music Awards Top Rap Album Nominated

Commercial performance

The album debuted at number 3 on the Billboard 200 chart, with first-week sales of 52,000 copies in the United States. The New Classic was the highest-charting female rap album, since Nicki Minaj's Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded (2012) and the highest chart entry for a female rapper's debut album since Nicki Minaj's Pink Friday (2010) entered at number 2.[94][95] In its second week, the album sold 23,000 more copies.[96] The album also moved up to number one on the Billboard Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums and Top Rap Albums, making Azalea the first non-American female rapper to reach the summit of these charts.[97][98] In its third week, it sold 15,000 more copies in the United States.[99] In its fourth week, the album sold 16,000 more copies.[100]

It re-entered the top forty on the Billboard 200 chart for the week ending 28 December 2014, selling 10,000 more copies and bringing its annual total to 485,000 in the United States.[101][102] As of February 2015, it had crossed the 1.6 million track and streaming equivalent album sales mark in the US.[103] As of April 2015, The New Classic has sold 500,000 copies in the United States.[104] In April 2016, it was certified platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America.

On 26 August 2014, the album was certified gold in Canada.[105] On 24 November 2014, it also received a Gold certification in Australia.[106] The album was named the second most-streamed album of the year overall in the US,[107] third in the UK and globally on commercial music streaming service Spotify in 2014.[108] On 2 February 2015, it was certified Platinum in Colombia.[109][110] The New Classic also received a Platinum certification in Brazil, along with its repack Reclassified, on 8 November 2015.[111]

Track listing

Standard edition[112]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Walk the Line"  
  • Amethyst Kelly
  • Kurtis "The Arcade" Mckenzie
  • George "The Invisible Men" Astasio
  • Jon "The Invisible Men" Shave
  • Jason "The Invisible Men" Pebworth
  • Jon Turner
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:38
2. "Don't Need Y'all"  
  • Kelly
  • Turner
  • Jon Mills
  • Shave
  • Pebworth
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:33
3. "100" (featuring Watch The Duck)Watch The Duck 4:09
4. "Change Your Life" (featuring T.I.)
The Messengers 3:40
5. "Fancy" (featuring Charli XCX)
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:19
6. "New Bitch"  
  • Kelly
  • Shave
  • Sims
  • Pebworth
  • Astasio
  • Joey Dyer
  • The Invisible Men
  • Dyer
3:37
7. "Work"  
  • Kelly
  • Sims
  • Markous "1st Down" Roberts
  • Pebworth
  • Astasio
  • Shave
  • 1st Down
  • The Invisible Men
3:43
8. "Impossible Is Nothing"  
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:10
9. "Goddess"  
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:10
10. "Black Widow" (featuring Rita Ora)StarGate 3:29
11. "Lady Patra" (featuring Mavado)
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
3:56
12. "Fuck Love"  
  • Kelly
  • Turner
  • Mills
  • Theron Thomas
  • Timothy Thomas
  • Shave
  • Pebworth
  • Astasio
  • The Invisible Men
  • The Arcade
2:39

Credits and personnel

Credits for The New Classic adapted from Allmusic.[115]

  • 1st Down – drums, keyboards, producer, programming
  • Richard Adlam – keyboards, producer, programming, vocals (background)
  • Kishan Amin – vocals
  • The Arcade – producer
  • George Astasio – drums, guitar, keyboards, programming
  • Nasri Atweh – main personnel
  • Iggy Azalea – composer, creative director, primary artist, vocals, vocals (background)
  • Chris Berdine – packaging
  • Tim Blacksmith – executive producer, production coordination
  • Elliot Carter – vocal engineer
  • Charli XCX – composer, featured artist, vocals
  • Danny D – executive producer, production coordination
  • Josh Drucker – assistant
  • Joey Dyer – composer, drums, keyboards, producer, programming
  • Mikkel Eriksen – vocal engineer
  • Mikkel Storleer Eriksen – composer
  • Frank Farian – composer
  • Feddaweight – vocal engineer
  • Clifford Harris – composer
  • Stuart Hawkes – mastering
  • Kelli-Leigh Henry-Davila – vocals (background)
  • Tor Erik Hermansen – composer
  • Sarah Hudson – composer
  • The Invisible Men – composer, producer
  • Jaycen Joshua – mixing
  • Tiffani Juno – vocals (background)
  • Ryan Kaul – assistant
  • Nadia Khan – management
  • Anthony Kilhoffer – mixing
  • Raja Kumari – composer, vocals (background)
  • Benjamin Levin – composer

  • Lovy Longomba – composer
  • Mavado – composer, featured artist, vocals
  • Kurtis McKenzie – composer, drums, keyboards, programming
  • Daler Mehndi – composer
  • The Messengers – composer, producer
  • Adam Messinger – main personnel
  • Jon Mills – composer, drums, guitar, keyboards, programming
  • Sean Momberger – keyboards
  • Brooke Nipar – cover photo
  • Rita Ora – featured artist, vocals
  • Jason Pebworth – keyboards
  • Katy Perry – composer
  • Yolanda Quartey – vocals (background)
  • Hal Ritson – drums (steel), keyboards, producer, programming
  • Daniela Rivera – assistant
  • Trocon Markous Roberts – composer
  • Rock City – composer
  • Kyle Ross – assistant
  • Jon Shave – drums, keyboards, programming
  • Natalie Sims – composer
  • Stargate – instrumentation, programming
  • Sarah Stennett – executive producer, management
  • T.I. – composer, executive producer, featured artist, vocals
  • Phil Tan – mixing
  • Jon Turner – composer
  • Miles Walker – assistant
  • Watch the Duck – featured artist, producer, vocals
  • Eric Weaver – vocal engineer
  • Andrew Wuepper – mixing
  • Gabriel Yared – composer
  • Daniel Zaidenstadt – vocal engineer

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2014) Peak
position
scope="row" Australian Albums (ARIA)[116] 2
Australian Urban Albums (ARIA)[117] 1
scope="row" Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[118] 48
scope="row" Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[119] 65
scope="row" Canadian Albums (Billboard)[120] 2
scope="row" Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[121] 29
scope="row" Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[122] 58
scope="row" Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[123] 24
scope="row" French Albums (SNEP)[124] 99
scope="row" German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[125] 83
scope="row" Irish Albums (IRMA)[126] 13
scope="row" New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[127] 3
scope="row" Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[128] 6
scope="row" Scottish Albums (OCC)[129] 6
scope="row" Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[130] 12
scope="row" UK Albums (OCC)[131] 5
scope="row" UK R&B Albums (OCC)[132] 1
scope="row" US Billboard 200[133] 3
scope="row" US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[134] 1
scope="row" US Top Rap Albums (Billboard)[135] 1

Year-end charts

Chart (2014) Position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[136] 43
Australian Urban Albums (ARIA)[137] 6
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[138] 35
US Billboard 200[139] 42
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[140] 9
US Top Rap Albums (Billboard)[141] 3
Chart (2015) Position
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[142] 54

Certifications

|[143]
Region Certification Sales/shipments
Australia (ARIA)[106] Gold 35,000
Brazil (ABPD)[144] Platinum 40,000
Canada (Music Canada)[105] Gold 40,000
Colombia (ASINCOL)[110] Platinum 20,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[145] Silver 60,000
United States (RIAA)[146] Platinum 1,000,000

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

Release history

Region Date Format(s) Label Ref.
United Kingdom 21 April 2014 Virgin EMI Records [38][147]
North America 22 April 2014 Def Jam [39][148]
Japan 23 April 2014 Universal Music [149][150][151]
Australia 25 April 2014 [40][152]
New Zealand
Mexico 20 June 2014 Virgin EMI Records [153]

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Further reading

External links

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