Aquarius (Tinashe album)

Aquarius
Studio album by Tinashe
Released October 3, 2014 (2014-10-03)
Recorded 2013–14
Studio
Genre
Length 55:43
Label RCA
Producer
Tinashe chronology
Black Water
(2013)
Aquarius
(2014)
Amethyst
(2015)
Singles from Aquarius
  1. "2 On"
    Released: January 21, 2014
  2. "Pretend"
    Released: August 22, 2014
  3. "All Hands on Deck"
    Released: February 24, 2015

Aquarius is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Tinashe. It was released on October 3, 2014, by RCA Records. In 2011, after the disbandment of the girl group The Stunners, Tinashe announced that she would began pursuing a solo career. The following year, she released her debut mixtape, In Case We Die. After raising her profile with the mixtape, Tinashe met with RCA Records where she subsequently signed a recording contract. Following her signing a record deal, Tinashe immediately began working on the album. During the recording process for her debut album, she released two other mixtapes with Reverie (2012) and Black Water (2013).

Aquarius was titled after Tinashe's zodiac sign. The album incorporates several genres such as R&B, alternative R&B, and pop. The album's production was characterized as being synthetic, with atmospherics and minimalistic beats and electronics. The album's composition drew comparisons to a variety of artists including The Weeknd and Aaliyah. Most of the songs were written by Tinashe herself who also served as the album's executive producer alongside Tim Blacksmith, Mike Nazzaro and Danny D.

Upon its release, Aquarius received generally favorable reviews from music critics, who commended its production, lyrics, and themes, with reviewers comparing it to the work of Janet Jackson.[1][2] The album debuted at number 17 on the US Billboard 200, selling 18,821 copies in its first week. It also charted in Australia, France and the United Kingdom. The album was promoted with the release of three singles—"2 On", "Pretend", and "All Hands on Deck"—with the former reaching number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100.

Background

In 2011, following the disbandment of the girl group The Stunners, Tinashe began pursuing her music career as a solo artist.[3] In February 2012, it saw the release of her debut mixtape, In Case We Die.[4] The mixtape was supported by singles, the first being as a promotional song "Chainless" which was released to iTunes on December 19, 2011.[5] The mixtape also included the song "Boss", which was released as a free download on August 20, 2012, immediately after it was featured in an episode of the VH1 series Single Ladies.[6] In July 2012, Tinashe signed a deal with RCA Records.[6][7] She subsequently released her second mixtape, Reverie, on September 6, 2012 through her official website.[8] Tinashe sought to reintroduce herself creatively and artistically. She claimed that the album was an attempt to show fans who she is as an artist and additionally stated the album represents "a new season of music and art".[9]

Recording

Just working with different people as opposed to just doing everything myself was a definite learning process. It's a slower process, for sure. I've been working on it for a year and a half, while the mixed tapes I produced within a month.

— Tinashe, speaking on the album's recording process[10]

In 2013, Tinashe began work on her debut studio album.[11] Recording sessions took place in Los Angeles, London, Atlanta, New York, and Toronto.[12][13] Tinashe worked with several producers including Clams Casino, Ryan Hemsworth,[14] Stuart Matthewman, Mike Will Made It, DJ Mustard, T-Minus, Boi-1da, Fisticuffs, Best Kept Secret, Ritz Reynolds and many more.[15] During an interview, Tinashe revealed that she had been recording and producing the album for two years, compared her mixtapes which she had created in a month, Tinashe compared the process with her album as being different due to working with other producers, during her mixtapes Tinashe made all the "decisions", but when recording the album she was working with other "creative people" and had to become "comfortable".[16] During the album recording Tinashe, recorded and produced at her home studio in her bedroom, where she produced some of the interludes included on the album, which she described as being "tighter" than her previous production.[17]

During the album's recording, Tinashe avoided listening to music, so she was not heavily influenced by the work of other artists, stating she wanted the music to come from a "genuine place of inspiration."[17] The guest verses provided by Schoolboy Q and ASAP Rocky were recorded separately and sent to Tinashe via email, however her collaboration with Future was recorded in the studio with him in Atlanta. Speaking about working with Future, Tinashe said, "I went to Atlanta and worked together on the song, and we wrote at the same time."[17] In December 2013, Tinashe revealed she had almost completed the recording of the album with nearly one hundred songs being recorded at that point, she also revealed that she was at the final stages of the album's production, in which she was picking and choosing the album's final track listing as well as choosing "key songs" to fill the gaps.[18] During the recording process of the album Tinashe recorded one hundred songs, and in October 2014, one of the songs that was scrapped from the album, titled "Little Things", surfaced online.[19]

Originally, the Jennifer Lopez single "I Luh Ya Papi" was titled "I Luh You Nigga", and it was claimed that the song was written by Tinashe for Aquarius.[20][21] According to Tinashe, she went on to an early session with record producer Detail and they recorded the track, which was planned to be the singer's first single.[20] Later, Detail was in a session with Lopez and he played the track to her, prompting the singer to like it and cut her version. As claimed by Tinashe, "they switched the swag up a little bit," adding: "One day Detail calls me and is like 'B-T-dubs, J. Lo is singing that song.' I didn't believe it at first, I thought he was just not trying to give it to me for some reason. I was like 'J. Lo does not want that song, she's not gonna sing that.' And then it came out. I guess she wanted it."[20][21]

Composition

Aquarius explores a variety of genres including R&B, alternative R&B,[22] and pop.[23] Dean Van Nguyen of NME described the album's music as a mix of The Weeknd's "decadent alt-R&B" and Aaliyah's "seductive cyber-pop".[23] August Brown of the Los Angeles Times called the album's music "weird, wonderful world of experimental beat" which he compared to other PBR&B singers including FKA twigs and Kelela, continuing to say the album has rhythm and swing "yet cut through with melancholy."[24] Andy Kellman of AllMusic described the album's musical style as being mostly "low-lit, slinking in tempo, and stitched together with several interludes", which Kellman described as being influenced by The Velvet Rope by Janet Jackson.[1] Dean Van Nguyen of NME noted the album's production for being "synthetic" and containing "[l]urid, crawling atmospherics led by beats and keys" along with "minimalism, thumping beats and electronics."[23] Andy Kellman from AllMusic described the production as being "laced with small details, subtle twists, and gradual intensification."[1] Sally-Anne Hurley from theMusic.com.au said the album "falls somewhere between mainstream, radio-friendly R&B and the electro, new-age alternative that's transformed the urban genre in a big way recently".[25]

Songs

"2 On"
A 23-second sample of "2 On" by Tinashe featuring Schoolboy Q, where the chorus is heard.

Problems playing this file? See media help.

The album opens with the intro "Aquarius" - the song features a "spacey" production with a whispery soul aesthetic, followed by "Bet" which features Dev Hynes. "Bet" is a "mystical" with "ride-or-die" lyrics, that brushed off "haters". The song closes with Devonté Hynes performing a guitar outro.[26] "Cold Sweat" is a dynamic song that sees Tinashe observing fake friends and overall sycophancy that comes with stardom. The song's production "begins at a crawl before evolving into a pendulum of synths", followed by the album's first interlude titled "Nightfall".[26] "2 On" is an electronic R&B song, marking a slight departure from the murky alternative R&B from her mixtapes.[27] The song features "effervescent keys", "synth-string accents", finger snaps, trap hi-hats, electro beats and distant chilly sighs.[27][28][29] The song features a sample of Sean Paul's 2005 single "We Be Burnin'", with the line "Just give me the trees and we can smoke it ya/Just give me the drink and we can pour it ya" featured in the middle eight.[29] Lyrically, the song is a carpe-diem anthem about being "super hyped up, super extra out on whatever emotion that it is."[30]

"All Hands on Deck" is a crunk&B song.[2] It comprises a thick bassline[26] and a pan flute breakdown.[22][31] Noted to be a shift from more sweet and coy-sounding tracks on Aquarius,[32] Tinashe solicits a snarling technique in her vocal delivery,[22] The song's lyrical content was noted to combine a dance instructional with the subject of caustic post-break-up stunting, namely in the lyric, "Kiss the old me goodbye / She's dead and gone".[22] It portrays a scenario of a woman retaining her confidence and embracing her love life after a break-up.[33]

Release and promotion

Promoting the album, Tinashe began performing the lead single "2 On". She first performed the song at SXSW Festival 2014. She also performed it at the Power 106 LA concert, Capital Xtra, Rinse FM, V100.7/Milwaukee's Family Affair, The Vipor Room and Hot 97's Who's Next. Drake also invited her on stage to perform the remix to the song in Houston.[34] Tinashe performed the song on The Wendy Williams Show on July 21, 2014.[35] In May 2014 rapper Iggy Azalea announced she would being going on tour in April 2015, also revealed in the North American leg announcement was that Nick Jonas and Tinashe would be the special guests supporting Azalea on the first leg of the tour, promoting their latest individual efforts, Nick Jonas (2014) and Aquarius (2014). Azalea's disc jockey, DJ Wizz Kidd, was also to support Azalea throughout the tour.[36] However, the tour was cancelled and Tinashe was subsequently announced to be the opening act for Nicki Minaj on her The Pinkprint Tour, along with Meek Mill, Rae Sremmurd, and Dej Loaf.[37] Tinashe's debut concert tour, Aquarius Tour, visited North America, Europe, Oceania, and Asia.

Singles

"2 On", which features American rapper Schoolboy Q, was released on January 21, 2014 as the lead single from Aquarius.[38] It impacted US rhythmic contemporary and urban contemporary radio on March 18, 2014.[39][40] The song peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100, number 53 on the UK Singles Chart and stayed at number one for four weeks on the Billboard Rhythmic Chart. As of October 2014, "2 On" had sold 603,000 downloads in the US.[41]

The album's second single, "Pretend" featuring ASAP Rocky, was released on August 22, 2014.[42] "All Hands on Deck" was sent to US urban contemporary radio on February 24, 2015 as the third single from the album.[43]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic80/100[44]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]
Billboard[26]
Exclaim!7/10[45]
Fact[46]
Los Angeles Times[24]
NME8/10[23]
Pitchfork7.5/10[22]
Q[47]
Rolling Stone[48]
Slant Magazine[2]

Aquarius received generally favorable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 80, based on 13 reviews.[44] August Brown of the Los Angeles Times commented that the album "heralds an essential new voice, one that coheres 100 current ideas about women, sex, sadness and musical restlessness in one excellent album."[24] John Kennedy of Billboard described the album as "a lustful listen that often centers on either coming together or breaking apart."[26] Meaghan Garvey of Pitchfork wrote, "As [Tinashe has] shed the trappings of distinctly 2010s R&B for something less easily time-stamped, she's revealed a new and very telling set of inspirations, unmistakably the product of coming of age in the Y2K era of R&B, where Janet Jackson and Aaliyah gracefully countered choreography-happy, big-budget smashes with flashes of something darker and deeply personal."[22] Andy Kellman of AllMusic remarked that "Tinashe's voice is almost always quiet and soft, yet her ability is considerable, and she packs a wide variety of approaches. Another indicator of potential here is that she is listed first as the co-writer of all but one of the songs."[1]

At Rolling Stone, Julianne Escobedo Shepherd praised the album as "savvy" and "self-assured", stating, "Throughout, Tinashe's sweet soprano sets up a hazy mood that's easy to get lost in."[48] Jabbari Weekes of Exclaim! called the album "solid" and concluded, "Although Aquarius may not rock the boat with innovation, it's more than confident in its stride, delivering an entertaining effort from the sultry singer."[45] Steve Yates of Q noted that "Aquarius has its generic aspects—the creamy vocals, drifting tempos and woozy electronics—but Tinashe's voice is pure and malleable, her lyrics suggestive and assertive."[47] Dean Van Nguyen of NME opined, "At 18 tracks, Aquarius may be overstuffed (the ambient interludes offer little) but it's an impressive statement that should elevate Tinashe far beyond the hype that has surrounded her mixtape releases so far."[23] Despite criticizing Tinashe's "tendency to over-stuff her songs with lyrics that veer cringe-inducingly between being both super literal and super opaque", Aimee Cliff of Fact expressed that "Aquarius is quite a complicated and accomplished album in that it's amplified the potential of the mixtapes, making Tinashe into an unquestionable contender for real popstar status, without sacrificing the weirdo introspective soul that made them so special."[46] In a mixed review, Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani found Aquarius to be "remarkably consistent despite its myriad producers", but felt that "[t]oo much of the album [...] fails to live up to that standard", adding that Mike Will Made It's and Stargate's contributions "sound utterly generic when sandwiching more forward-minded tracks like 'Far Side of the Moon'".[2]

Accolades

Publication List Rank
Billboard The 10 Best R&B Albums of 2014[49] 3
Complex The 50 Best Albums of 2014[50] 48
Cosmopolitan The 20 Best Albums of 2014[51] 6
Guardian, TheThe Guardian The Best Albums of 2014[52] 26
Pitchfork The 50 Best Albums of 2014[53] 36
Rolling Stone 20 Best R&B Albums of 2014[54] 3
Spin The 50 Best Albums of 2014[55] 8
Stereogum The 50 Best Albums of 2014[56] 40
Vibe 46 Albums from 2014 That Are Actually Worth Your Money[57] 19
Vulture The 32 Best Pop Albums of 2014[58] 27

Commercial performance

Aquarius debuted at number 17 on the Billboard 200, selling 18,821 copies in its opening week.[59] In its second week of sales, the album dropped to number 64 on the chart with 4,950 copies sold.[60] As of December 2015, Aquarius had sold 70,000 copies in the United States.[61]

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Aquarius"  
Ritz Reynolds 3:55
2. "Bet" (featuring Devonté Hynes) 5:40
3. "Cold Sweat"  
5:12
4. "Nightfall (Interlude)"   Tinashe 0:07
5. "2 On" (featuring Schoolboy Q)
  • McFarlane
  • Redwine
  • DJ Marley Waters
3:47
6. "How Many Times" (featuring Future)Cameron 3:36
7. "What Is There to Lose (Interlude)"   
  • Legacy
  • Tinashe
0:31
8. "Pretend" (featuring ASAP Rocky)
3:53
9. "All Hands on Deck"   3:41
10. "Indigo Child (Interlude)"  KachingweEvian Christ 1:30
11. "Far Side of the Moon"  
  • Kachingwe
  • Osinachi Nwaneri
Nwaneri 4:05
12. "The Calm (Interlude)"   Tinashe 0:30
13. "Feels Like Vegas"  Stargate 4:01
14. "Thug Cry"  
3:28
15. "Deep in the Night (Interlude)"   Tinashe 0:57
16. "Bated Breath"  
  • Kachingwe
  • Reynolds
Reynolds 5:49
17. "Wildfire"  
  • Michel Heyaca
  • Matt Parad
  • Donna Missal
Michel 3:37
18. "The Storm (Outro)"   Tinashe 1:24
Total length:
55:43
Notes
Sample credits

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Aquarius.[13]

  • Tinashe – vocals (all tracks); recording (tracks 1, 2); production (tracks 4, 7, 12, 15, 18); album production, executive production
  • A+ – co-producer (track 14)
  • Dominic Angelella – additional instrumentation (track 1)
  • ASAP Rocky – vocals (track 7)
  • Tim Blacksmith – executive production (tracks 9, 13)
  • Blood Diamonds – keyboards, production, programming (track 2)
  • Boi-1da – production (track 3)
  • Jasper Cameron – production (track 6)
  • Cashmere Cat – all instruments, production, programming (track 9)
  • Maddox Chimm – mixing assistance (tracks 3, 6, 8, 14)
  • Evian Christ – production (track 10)
  • Danny D – executive production (tracks 9, 13)
  • DJ Dahi – keyboards, production, programming (track 2)
  • Roscoe Dash – backing vocals (track 13)
  • Kevin "KD" Davis – mixing (track 13)
  • Hector Delgado – mixing, recording (ASAP Rocky vocals) (track 8)
  • Detail – production (track 8)
  • Mikkel S. Eriksen – all instruments, programming, recording (tracks 9, 13)
  • Future – vocals (track 6)
  • Gee Bizzy – mixing assistance, recording assistance (ASAP Rocky vocals) (track 8)
  • Erwin Gorostiza – creative director
  • Jeff Halsey – mixing assistance (track 13)
  • Tor Erik Hermansen – all instruments, programming (tracks 9, 13)
  • Stephen Hybicki – recording (track 14)
  • Devonté Hynes – guitar, vocals (track 2)
  • Trevor Jerideau – A&R, album producer
  • Jaycen Joshua – mixing (tracks 3, 5, 6, 8, 14)
  • Ryan Kaul – mixing assistance (tracks 3, 5, 6, 8, 14)
  • Sean Knotty – additional drums (track 6)
  • Dave Kutch – mastering
  • Legacy – production (track 7)
  • Erik Madrid – mixing (tracks 1, 2, 4, 7, 10–12, 15, 17, 18)
  • Maria Paula Marulanda – art direction, design
  • Dijon "DJ Mustard" McFarlane – production (track 5)
  • Michel – engineering, production (track 17)
  • Mike Will Made It – production (track 14)
  • Donna Missal – backing vocals (track 17)
  • Keith Naftaly – A&R
  • Ali Nazarro – management
  • Mike Nazzaro – album production, executive production, management
  • The Order – production (track 8)
  • Redwine – production (track 5)
  • Ritz Reynolds – production (tracks 1, 16); recording (track 1); mixing (track 16)
  • Daniela Rivera – additional mix engineering (track 9)
  • Sango – additional production (track 3)
  • Schoolboy Q – vocals (track 5)
  • Michael Schwartz – photography
  • Julie Slick – additional instrumentation (track 1)
  • Stargate – production (tracks 9, 13)
  • Mike Taylor – backing vocals (track 16)
  • Jaime Velez – engineering, recording (tracks 11, 16)
  • Vincent Vu – mixing assistance (tracks 1, 2, 4, 7, 10–12, 15, 17, 18)
  • Miles Walker – recording (tracks 9, 13)
  • DJ Marley Waters – production (track 5)

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2014) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[64] 57
Australian Urban Albums (ARIA)[65] 5
French Albums (SNEP)[66] 167
UK Albums (OCC)[67] 78
UK R&B Albums (OCC)[68] 7
US Billboard 200[69] 17
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[70] 3

Year-end charts

Chart (2014) Position
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[71] 89

Release history

Region Date Format Label Ref.
Germany October 3, 2014 Sony [72][73]
Ireland RCA [74][75]
France October 6, 2014 Sony [76][77]
United Kingdom RCA [78][79]
United States October 7, 2014 [80][81]
Australia October 10, 2014 Sony [82][83]
Japan November 26, 2014 CD [63]

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