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2015 studio album by Jamie xx From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In Colour is the debut studio album by English producer Jamie xx, released on 29 May 2015 by Young Turks. The album was composed during a five-year period while a member of the indie pop band the xx, starting with his production on xx in 2009. After starting his solo career with the remix album We're New Here (2011) and singles like "All Under One Roof Raving" (2014), he was intent on making the album something of a departure from his previous work and genre. The album features guest vocals from fellow the xx members Romy and Oliver Sim, as well as from Young Thug and Popcaan. The album produced five singles: "Girl" and "Sleep Sound" as a double-single on 5 May 2014, "Loud Places" on 27 March 2015, "Gosh" on 4 May, and "I Know There's Gonna Be (Good Times)" on 22 May.
In Colour | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 29 May 2015 | |||
Recorded | 2012–2014 | |||
Studio |
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Genre | ||||
Length | 42:44 | |||
Label | Young Turks | |||
Producer | Jamie xx, Four Tet | |||
Jamie xx chronology | ||||
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Singles from In Colour | ||||
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In Colour received widespread acclaim from critics. It debuted at number three on the UK Albums Chart, selling 19,255 copies in its first week.[1] In the United States, the album entered the Billboard 200 at number 21 and topped the Dance/Electronic Albums, with first-week sales of 19,000 copies.[2] It was nominated for the 2015 Mercury Prize, MasterCard British Album of the Year at the 2016 Brit Awards and Best Dance/Electronic Album at the 58th Grammy Awards.
Smith produced the xx's debut album, xx (2009), "by accident" after sessions with other producers including Diplo were unsuccessful.[3] Later in 2009, Smith began his solo career when he remixed Florence and the Machine's "You've Got the Love".[4] Smith was invited by XL Recordings owner Richard Russell to remix Gil Scott-Heron's 2010 album I'm New Here in its entirety. The resulting album, the electronic-based We're New Here, was released in 2011.[3] He released his debut single, the double A-side "Far Nearer" / "Beat For" in June 2011.[5] The following year, Smith used samples from We're New Here on Drake's "Take Care", which became a US top-10 hit.[6] In Colour was announced on 23 March 2015.[7]
The album was composed over five years, with Smith struggling to finish the music once he had started making it.[3] Smith wanted to make an album that sounded like it did not come from any particular era.[8] It is an electronica[9] and dance[10] record, blending styles of UK garage,[11][12] house[12] and rave.[12] Smith used vocal samples from British media sources that he had encountered while away on tour. The vocal sample at the beginning of "Girl" is taken from an episode of the British drama television series Top Boy, and "Gosh" features a clip from a BBC Radio 1 programme called One in the Jungle that was never aired.[8] "Seesaw" was recorded in collaboration with Kieran Hebden.[4] "I Know There's Gonna Be (Good Times)" is based around a sample of The Persuasions' 1971 song "Good Times" from their album Street Corner Symphony,[4] which Smith had bought in Detroit.[8] The song features vocals by American rapper Young Thug and Jamaican musician Popcaan, which were recorded separately and spliced together by Smith.[8]
The first single from the album, "Sleep Sound", premiered on 27 March 2014.[13] A music video for "Sleep Sound", directed by Sofia Mattioli and featuring 13 members of the Manchester Deaf Centre, was released on 10 April 2014.[14] The second single from the album, "Girl", was released on 18 April 2014. "Girl" and "Sleep Sound" were later released as a double A-side on 5 May 2014.[15] On 25 March 2015, the tracks "Gosh" and "Loud Places" premiered on Annie Mac.[16]
On 27 March, a music video for "Loud Places", featuring Jamie xx and the xx bandmate Romy Madley Croft skateboarding at night in London, was released.[17] On 27 April 2015, a music video for "Gosh" was released.[18] On 11 May 2015, the song "I Know There's Gonna Be (Good Times)", featuring Young Thug and Popcaan, was released.[19]
On 26 May 2015, In Colour was streamed in its entirety on iTunes.[20] In Colour was released on 29 May 2015 in digital, CD, LP and a limited deluxe triple-LP edition. The deluxe edition of the album, cut on coloured vinyl, featured two exclusive instrumental tracks.[21]
In 2016, it was awarded a gold certification from the Independent Music Companies Association, indicating sales of at least 75,000 copies throughout Europe.[22]
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AnyDecentMusic? | 8.2/10[23] |
Metacritic | 87/100[24] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [25] |
The A.V. Club | B[9] |
Financial Times | [26] |
The Guardian | [10] |
NME | 9/10[27] |
Pitchfork | 9.3/10[28] |
Q | [29] |
Rolling Stone | [30] |
Spin | 9/10[31] |
Vice (Expert Witness) | A−[32] |
In Colour received widespread acclaim from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a weighted mean rating out of 100 top reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 87, based on 39 reviews.[24] Q magazine praised it as "an album so rich, complex and dazzlingly fluid" in a rave review,[29] while Pitchfork's Mark Richardson called it a "dazzling culmination of Jamie xx's last six years of work, gathering up elements of everything he’s done—moody ballads, floor-filling bangers, expansive and off-kilter collaborations with vocalists—and packing them tightly into a glittering ball that reflects spinning fragments of feeling back at us."[28] Nina Corcoran of Consequence of Sound gave the album a grade of A, writing "Each song grows richer the more you explore its open space. Its minimalism breathes buckets of color. After one listen or 10, In Colour reflects brightly, a phenomenally poised and universally approachable solo debut."[33] In another positive review, Phil Hebblethwaite of NME wrote "[O]n an album defined by its creator making perfect choices, it fits, and you'd never know that Jamie cobbled ‘In Colour’ together on downtime over the last seven year."[27] Gareth James of Clash called the album "an emotive, emphatic and often joyous collection of music that plays equally for the head and the heart."[34] Robert Christgau wrote in Noisey that while the music functioned poorly as background music, listening to the record in the foreground left him captivated by the music's "glimmers of beat, snatches of melody, trick sounds, and fluctuating dynamics as well as the hooks with which most tracks are equipped and around which few are structured".[32]
In a less enthusiastic review, Andrew Ryce from Resident Advisor remarks that In Colour is an "uneven album that's rarely as profound or as meaningful as it tries to be".[35] In another mixed review, The Quietus's Christian Eede called the album "a collection of sexless, sonically conservative tracks overwrought in bass and nostalgia, and largely void of personality – club music for the neoliberal age."[36]
The album was nominated for the 2015 Mercury Music Prize[37] and Best Dance/Electronic Album at the 58th Grammy Awards.[38]
In 2019, Pitchfork ranked the album at number 25 in their list of "The 200 Best Albums of the 2010s"; editor Puja Patel wrote: "In Colour was the result of [Jamie xx's] self-directed club education, a collection of influences—’90s jungle, swaggy doo-wop, the exaltation of trance, and the tension of two-step—that were reverent of the past but wary of nostalgia. It’s the sound of longing and loneliness mixed with the joyful relief of discovering that you've been among friends all along."[39]
Publication | Accolade | Rank | Ref. |
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Billboard | 25 Best Albums of 2015 | 6 |
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Complex | Best Albums of 2015 | 15 |
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Consequence of Sound | Top 50 Albums of 2015 | 6 |
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Entertainment Weekly | The 40 Best Albums of 2015 | 4 |
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The Guardian | The Best Albums of 2015 | 17 |
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NME | NME's Albums of the Year 2015 | 3 |
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Pitchfork | The 50 Best Albums of 2015 | 2 |
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Readers' Top 50 Albums | 4 |
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Rough Trade | Albums of the Year 2015 | 10 |
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Stereogum | The 50 Best Albums of 2015 | 11 |
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Time | Top 10 Best Albums | 9 |
|
Vulture | The 10 Best Albums of 2015 | 2 |
Publication | Accolade | Rank | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
The A.V. Club | The 50 Best Albums of the 2010s | 31 |
|
Consequence of Sound | The 100 Top Albums of the 2010s | 26 |
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NME | Greatest Albums of the 2010s | 27 |
|
Paste | The 100 Best Albums of the 2010s | 56 |
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Pitchfork | The 200 Best Albums of the 2010s | 25 |
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Rolling Stone | 100 Best Albums of the 2010s | 84 |
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Uproxx | 100 Best Albums of the 2010s | 51 |
All tracks produced by Jamie Smith, except "SeeSaw", produced by Smith and Kieran Hebden.
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Gosh" | Jamie Smith | 4:51 |
2. | "Sleep Sound" |
| 3:52 |
3. | "SeeSaw" (featuring Romy) |
| 4:28 |
4. | "Obvs" |
| 3:51 |
5. | "Just Saying" | J. Smith | 1:23 |
6. | "Stranger in a Room" (featuring Oliver Sim) |
| 2:57 |
7. | "Hold Tight" | J. Smith | 4:03 |
8. | "Loud Places" (featuring Romy) |
| 4:43 |
9. | "I Know There's Gonna Be (Good Times)" (featuring Young Thug and Popcaan) |
| 3:33 |
10. | "The Rest Is Noise" | J. Smith | 4:58 |
11. | "Girl" | J. Smith | 4:02 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
12. | "Stranger in a Room" (instrumental) | 3:03 |
13. | "Loud Places" (instrumental) | 4:51 |
14. | "All Under One Roof Raving" (instrumental) | 5:55 |
15. | "All Under One Roof Raving" | 5:59 |
Sample credits
Credits adapted from the liner notes of In Colour.[60]
Weekly charts
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Year-end charts
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Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
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United Kingdom (BPI)[96] | Gold | 100,000‡ |
‡ Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone. |
Region | Date | Format | Edition | Label | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | 29 May 2015 | Standard | [97][98][99] | ||
Germany |
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|
[100][101] | ||
LP |
|
[102][103] | |||
Ireland |
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Standard | Young Turks | [104][105][106] | |
France | 1 June 2015 | [107][108][109] | |||
United Kingdom |
|
[110][111] | |||
LP |
|
[112][113] | |||
United States | 2 June 2015 |
|
Standard | XL | [114][115][116] |
Japan | 3 June 2015 |
|
Hostess | [59] |
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