18 Months

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18 Months
Studio album by Calvin Harris
Released 26 October 2012 (2012-10-26)
Recorded 2010–12; Fly Eye Studios (London, England); Westlake Recording Studios (West Hollywood, California); White Villa (Ede, Netherlands)
Genre
Length 49:47
Label
Producer
Calvin Harris chronology

Ready for the Weekend
(2009)
18 Months
(2012)
Singles from 18 Months
  1. "Bounce"
    Released: 10 June 2011 (2011-06-10)
  2. "Feel So Close"
    Released: 19 August 2011 (2011-08-19)
  3. "Let's Go"
    Released: 30 March 2012 (2012-03-30)
  4. "We'll Be Coming Back"
    Released: 27 July 2012 (2012-07-27)
  5. "Sweet Nothing"
    Released: 12 October 2012 (2012-10-12)
  6. "Drinking from the Bottle"
    Released: 27 January 2013 (2013-01-27)
  7. "I Need Your Love"
    Released: 12 April 2013 (2013-04-12)
  8. "Thinking About You"
    Released: 2 August 2013 (2013-08-02)

18 Months is the third studio album by Scottish DJ and record producer Calvin Harris. It was released on 26 October 2012 by Columbia Records. The album includes the singles "Bounce", "Feel So Close", "Let's Go", "We'll Be Coming Back", "Sweet Nothing", "Drinking from the Bottle", "I Need Your Love" and "Thinking About You". All eight of the aforementioned singles, along with "We Found Love" (featuring Rihanna), reached the top ten of the UK Singles Chart, making 18 Months the first album in history to have nine top ten singles.[1][2]

The album debuted atop the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 52,356 copies, earning Harris his second consecutive number-one album in the United Kingdom. Harris first unveiled the album's artwork on 13 September 2012 via Twitter.[3]

Singles

"Bounce" was released as the album's lead single on 10 June 2011, featuring American R&B singer Kelis.[4] The song peaked at number two in the United Kingdom,[5] number one in Scotland,[6] number six in Ireland[7] and number seven in Australia.[8]

Second single "Feel So Close" was released on 19 August 2011,[9] reaching number two in the United Kingdom and Ireland,[5][7] number one in Scotland[10] and number seven in Australia.[8] The song also became Harris's first solo single to chart on the Billboard Hot 100 in the United States, reaching number twelve.[11]

"Let's Go" was released as the album's third single on 30 March 2012, and it features American R&B singer Ne-Yo.[12] It peaked at number two in the United Kingdom and Scotland,[5][13] number six in Ireland[7] and number seventeen in Australia and the US.[8][11] "Let's Go" was used in Pepsi Max's Crowd Surfing TV advert.[14]

"We'll Be Coming Back", featuring English singer-rapper Example, was released on 27 July 2012 as the fourth single from the album.[15] It peaked at number two in the United Kingdom, number one in Ireland and Scotland,[16] and number eight in Australia,[8] It became Harris's and Example's first solo single to reach number one in Ireland.[7][17]

"Sweet Nothing" was released as the album's fifth single on 12 October 2012, featuring Florence Welch of English indie rock band Florence and the Machine.[18] The song topped the charts in the UK and Ireland,[7] becoming Harris and Welch's second collaborative number-one single,[19] as well as the first UK chart-topper from 18 Months.[5] It also became his highest-charting solo single in Australia and New Zealand, entering the charts at number two in both countries.[20][21] In the US, the single peaked at number ten on the Billboard Hot 100.[11]

"Drinking from the Bottle" was released as the album's sixth official single on 27 January 2013. The song reached number five in the UK and number nine in Ireland.[5][7]

"I Need Your Love", which features English singer Ellie Goulding, was released on 12 April 2013 as the seventh single from the album.[22] The track reached number four in the UK and number six in Ireland,[5][7] while charting inside the top five in countries such as Australia, Austria, Finland and Sweden.[23] When "I Need Your Love" reached the UK top five in April 2013. Harris made chart history by becoming the first artist to attain eight top ten hits from one studio album (including "We Found Love"), overtaking the previous record set by Michael Jackson.[1]

"Thinking About You", featuring Ayah Marar, was released on 2 August 2013 as the album's eighth and final single.[24] It reached number eight in the UK,[5] number eleven in Ireland,[7] number twenty-eight in Australia and number forty in New Zealand.[25]

Promotional singles

"Awooga" was released as on 21 March 2011 through Harris's label Fly Eye Records.[26] The accompanying music video consists of footage from his then-recent concerts in Australia.[27] Harris's collaboration with Nicky Romero, "Iron", was released on Beatport on 10 September 2012 by Protocol Recordings.[28]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
Source Rating
Metacritic 57/100[29]
Review scores
Source Rating
AllMusic [30]
The A.V. Club C+[31]
Entertainment Weekly C+[32]
The Guardian [33]
The Independent [34]
Los Angeles Times [35]
Metro 4/5[36]
NME 6/10[37]
The Observer [38]
PopMatters 5/10[39]

18 Months received mixed to positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 57, based on 17 reviews, which indicates "mixed or average reviews".[29] Fraser McAlpine of BBC Music hailed the album as a "collection almost exclusively in the key of triumph", as well as "a portfolio of win for Calvin, an annual report where the graph is almost all peaks and the troughs are so far down they're practically invisible."[40] Arwa Haider of Metro commented that "18 Months could be a capsule collection of smash singles, yet it also works brilliantly as an album. That's partly because these are never faceless anthems; its singers [...] are well judged and rise to the songs, while the catchy hooks are lovingly arranged".[36] AllMusic's Tim Sendra wrote that the album "shows Harris to be a solid producer with an easily identifiable sound."[30] Mikael Wood of the Los Angeles Times noted that despite the variety of male collaborators, the album "only deepens the impression that Harris is best when linked with a lady; his skills in that area are several times more developed than they are anywhere else."[35] The Independent's Andy Gill was unimpressed by Ellie Goulding's performance on "I Need Your Love", but complimented Welch on "Sweet Nothing", and cited Harris's collaboration with Nicky Romero on "Iron" as the album's "killer cut".[34]

Emily Mackay of the NME opined that "[t]he best collaborations stand alone, but the rest demands small hours and sweat to animate it", stating the album "feels more like a deserved victory lap than a forward step or a new instalment, but apart from his sole vocal on 'Feel So Close', the victor seems oddly absent."[37] Killian Fox of The Observer argued that "[n]othing else on 18 Months matches up to the blockbusting collaborations with Kelis, Florence Welch and Rihanna", concluding that "Harris's production has become increasingly homogenised and, despite the array of vocalists, everything here risks sounding the same."[38] In a review for Entertainment Weekly, Melissa Maerz complimented songs like "We Found Love" and "I Need Your Love", but found that the album does not offer "many surprises".[32] Despite referring to Harris as a "brilliant pop craftsman", The A.V. Club's Chris DeVille felt that the album "suffers from EDM fatigue" and that "almost every track eventually congeals into the same automaton thud."[31] Evan Sawdey of PopMatters critiqued that "while 18 Months [...] is pretty much the hit-making monster that launched [Harris] in to the world spotlight, the truth of the matter is that it feels like a rather compromised vision of who he is an artist, sacrificing his quirkiness for a brooding new persona that starts to get stale over the course of a complete full-length."[39] The Guardian critic Rebecca Nicholson expressed that "Harris knows how to make the most of his guests, leading them through a series of euphoric bangers that seem destined for success. But for all the pop divas he has roped in, there's a veneer of cynical, laddy EDM, resulting in the kind of tracks Skrillex might come up with on an Ayia Napa booze cruise."[33]

Commercial performance

18 Months debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart with first-week sales of 52,356 copies, becoming Harris's second consecutive number-one album in the United Kingdom.[41] The album fell to number four the following week, selling 34,734 copies.[42] In its third week, it slipped to number nine on sales of 24,689 units.[43] In early January 2013, the album returned to number one for one week before slipping to number two.[44] 18 Months had sold over 650,000 copies in the UK by August 2013.[45]

Track listing

No. TitleWriter(s)Featured artist(s) Length
1. "Green Valley"  Calvin Harris  1:49
2. "Bounce"  HarrisKelis 3:42
3. "Feel So Close"  Harris  3:26
4. "We Found Love"  HarrisRihanna 3:35
5. "We'll Be Coming Back"  
Example 3:54
6. "Mansion"  Harris  2:07
7. "Iron"  
Nicky Romero 3:39
8. "I Need Your Love"  Ellie Goulding 3:54
9. "Drinking from the Bottle"  
Tinie Tempah 4:00
10. "Sweet Nothing"  Florence Welch 3:32
11. "School"  Harris  1:47
12. "Here 2 China"  Dillon Francis and Dizzee Rascal 2:32
13. "Let's Go"  
Ne-Yo 3:52
14. "Awooga"  Harris  3:51
15. "Thinking About You"  
Ayah Marar 4:07
Notes
  • The music videos for "Bounce", "Feel So Close", "Let's Go", "We'll Be Coming Back" and "Sweet Nothing" are available to download from Harris's official website when the album is purchased.

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of 18 Months.[49]

  • Calvin Harris – production (all tracks); arrangement (1–3, 5–7, 10, 11, 13, 14); instruments (1–6, 8–15); vocals (3, 7); mixing (4)
  • Simon Davey – mastering (1, 5–7, 10–12, 14)
  • Dizzee Rascal – rap (12)
  • Example – vocals (5)
  • Dillon Francis – instruments, production (12)
  • Ellie Goulding – vocals (8)
  • Kuk Harrell – vocal engineering, vocal production (4)
  • Kelis – vocals (2)
  • Kid Harpoon – vocal engineering (10)
  • Mark Knight – instruments, production (9)
  • Ayah Marar – vocals (15)

  • Mike Marsh – mastering (2, 3, 5, 7, 13)
  • Scott McCormick – engineering (5)
  • Ne-Yo – vocals (13)
  • James F. Reynolds – instruments, production (9)
  • Rihanna – vocals (4)
  • Nicky Romero – arrangement, instruments, production (7)
  • Phil Tan – mixing (4)
  • Tinie Tempah – rap (9)
  • Karen Thompson – mastering (8)
  • Marcos Tovar – vocal engineering (4)
  • Florence Welch – vocals (10)

Charts

Weekly charts

Chart (2012–13) Peak
position
Australian Albums Chart[50] 5
Australian Dance Albums Chart[51] 1
Austrian Albums Chart[52] 52
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)[53] 50
Belgian Albums Chart (Wallonia)[54] 44
Canadian Albums Chart[55] 8
Dutch Albums Chart[56] 48
French Albums Chart[57] 110
German Albums Chart[58] 63
Irish Albums Chart[59] 2
Japanese Albums Chart[60] 28
Mexican Albums Chart[61] 84
New Zealand Albums Chart[62] 4
Norwegian Albums Chart[63] 25
Scottish Albums Chart[64] 1
Spanish Albums Chart[65] 72
Swedish Albums Chart[66] 6
Swiss Albums Chart[67] 30
UK Albums Chart[68] 1
UK Dance Albums Chart[69] 1
US Billboard 200[70] 19
US Dance/Electronic Albums[71] 1

Year-end charts

Chart (2012) Position
Australian Albums Chart[72] 79
Australian Dance Albums Chart[73] 8
UK Albums Chart[74] 17
Chart (2013) Position
Australian Albums Chart[75] 63
Australian Dance Albums Chart[76] 8
Belgian Albums Chart (Flanders)[77] 174
UK Albums Chart[78] 18
US Dance/Electronic Albums[79] 5

Certifications

Region Certification Sales/shipments
Australia (ARIA)[80] Gold 35,000^
Ireland (IRMA)[81] Gold 7,500x
New Zealand (RMNZ)[82] Gold 7,500^

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

Release history

Region Date Format(s) Edition(s) Label
Germany[83] 26 October 2012
  • Standard
  • deluxe
Sony Music
Netherlands[84]
Ireland[85]
United Kingdom[86] 29 October 2012
France[87] Jive Epic
United States[88] 30 October 2012 Standard
Italy[89]
  • Standard
  • deluxe
Sony Music
Japan[48] 31 October 2012
Australia[90] 2 November 2012
  • CD
  • LP
  • digital download
Germany[83] LP Standard
United Kingdom[91] 5 November 2012
  • Deconstruction
  • Fly Eye
  • Columbia

See also

References

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