Hotel Cabana

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hotel Cabana
Studio album by Naughty Boy
Released 23 August 2013 (2013-08-23)
Recorded
Genre
Length 53:48
Label
Producer
  • Tim Blacksmith (exec.)
  • Riki Bleau (exec.)
  • Craze & Hoax
  • Ifan Dafydd
  • Danny D (exec.)
  • Komi
  • Mojam
  • Naughty Boy
  • Wez
Singles from Hotel Cabana
  1. "Wonder"
    Released: 21 October 2012 (2012-10-21)
  2. "La La La"
    Released: 5 June 2013 (2013-06-05)
  3. "Lifted"
    Released: 19 August 2013 (2013-08-19)
  4. "Think About It"
    Released: 17 November 2013 (2013-11-17)[2]

Hotel Cabana is the debut studio album by British record producer Shahid "Naughty Boy" Khan, released on 26 August 2013 through Naughty Boy Recordings and Virgin EMI. After quitting a degree in Business and Marketing in the early 2000s, Naughty Boy worked a number of jobs while producing music as a hobby; he slowly scaled up production, particularly boosted by winning £44,000 on Channel 4's Deal or No Deal. After signing a publishing deal with Sony ATV and a record deal with Virgin Records (now Virgin EMI), Khan set up his Naughty Boy Productions record and production company. He would find his break by producing Chipmunk's 2009 top-ten single "Diamond Rings", featuring a then unknown Emeli Sandé. Naughty Boy released his own debut single as a signed artist in 2010, "Never Be Your Woman" featured British grime artist Wiley and Sandé on the chorus; it reached top-ten in the UK and is included as a bonus track on Hotel Cabana.

The collaboration marked the start of a partnership between Naughty Boy and Sandé which is seen throughout Hotel Cabana and Sandé's debut set, Our Version of Events (2012). Hotel Cabana is R&B, pop and hip hop music productions record, with influences from orchestral and Bollywood music. It a concept album based on a luxury hotel where musicians come to perform, creating what Naughty Boy described as an audio-visual experience. Hotel Cabana reunites Naughty Boy with Sandé on eight collaborations, as well as features from other British artists such George the Poet, Sam Smith, Emeli Sandé, Bastille, Tinie Tempah, Ella Eyre, Gabrielle, Wretch 32, Mic Righteous, Maiday, Chasing Grace and Ed Sheeran. American rap artist Wiz Khalifa also makes an appearance.

Prior to release, Hotel Cabana was promoted with several video trailers which included the collaborating artists arriving at the fictional hotel. It was also preceded by the release of three critically and commercially successful singles, including includes the two top-ten Sandé collaborations: "Wonder" and "Lifted", as well as the UK Singles Chart-topper "La La La" (featuring Smith). Upon release, the album received mainly positive reviews from music critics who praised the collaborations with British artists, the versatility and radio appeal of the production and the hotel concept. Hotel Cabana made its chart debuts at number two in the UK, number five in Scotland and twenty-five in Ireland.

Background

Emeli Sandé features on eight of the album's tracks, including the singles "Wonder" and "Lifted".

In the early 2000s, Naughty Boy (under his real name Shahid Khan) was studying Business and Marketing at London Guildhall University (now London Metropolitan University), but dropped out after his first semester and began working various jobs.[3] Amongst other places, Khan worked at Dominos Pizza and Watford General hospital.[4] It was during this period of his life that he "decided to follow his ambition to write and produce his own music, under the name Naughty Boy Recordings."[3] All the while, Naughty Boy was recording songs in his parents' garden shed in Charlock Way in Watford, Hertfordshire.[3] The finances allowed him to upscale production from the garden shed to a studio in Ealing, West London. Eventually the aspiring producer got noticed by music executives and was awarded a three-year contract with Sony ATV, and a one-album record deal with Virgin Records (EMI Records).[3][4]

Naughty Boy Recordings was established with the help of The Prince's Trust, which in 2005, awarded Naughty Boy £5,000 to start up his business.[3] That same year, he appeared on Channel 4's hit day-time gameshow Deal or No Deal, where he won £44,000, further enabling him to purchase equipment and begin recording.[4] He got his big break in 2009 by co-writing and producing Chipmunk's hit single "Diamond Rings", featuring a then unknown session singer called Emeli Sandé.[4] Khan would once again work with Sandé, this time on his own debut single, "Never Be Your Woman" (2010), which samples of White Town's 1997 single "Your Woman" and "My Woman" by Al Bowlly.[5] Naughty Boy and Sandé formed a partnership leading them to work on many songs for Sandé's debut album Our Version of Events, as well as for Naughty Boy's debut, Hotel Cabana.[6] Naughty Boy told the Watford Observer that he had worked on the album for the last three years.[7]

Production and composition

Initially conceptualised for Dame Shirley Bassey, Naughty Boy would end up asking Gabrielle (pictured) to record "Hollywood", after deciding that her voice was "unique and incredible".[1]

Hotel Cabana is a pop, R&B and hip hop music record, containing "orchestral flourishes" and "Bollywood inflections".[8][9] Naughty Boy called Hotel Cabana more than an album, it was an audio-visual concept. "I want it to be an album for our time; it has a concept to it, so it's more like a film in some respects." Speaking about putting together the album, he said "I view it like I'm not just a producer – I'm a director too."[10] During an interview with the Watford Observer, Naughty Boy said "It’s a very diverse, musically organic album. There’s a lot of dance-future music that’s going on now." Explaining the "hotel" concept, he said "the album is like a hotel, and just like guests coming to stay, musicians appear on the album. Each song does stand alone, but all together, the album tells a story, it’s one guy’s journey, a bit like the song "Hotel California", it’s a twisted journey. You can visit, but you can never leave, you can listen to the album, but you won’t be able to stop.[7]

Hotel Cabana was recorded at Cabana Studios, a recording block located at Ealing Studios in London, UK; Naughty Boy told Sound on Sound magazine that the studio was always called "Cabana" and that naming his debut album Hotel Cabana was in part inspired by the studio.[11] The entire album was produced using Logic Pro and Reason.[12] The album centres predominately around the themes of fame, "involving debates about the tenuous nature of virtue and fidelity."[13] Speaking on how the album was composed, Naughty Boy used piano and live instruments, adding that it was "just the basics. What they would have had in the 70s."[8] While making the album, Naughty Boy was influenced by M.I.A., Tracy Chapman, Joe Goddard, Woodkid and Major Lazer.[10] On 19 August, Naughty Boy appeared on MistaJam's BBC Radio 1Xtra show to talk about the album track-by-track. "Hotel Cabana where the sleepless kids live" was created following several days Naughty Boy and Sandé spent in the studio together.[14]

George the Poet helps to establish the album's hotel concept through, starting with a monologue at the beginning of the set.[15] This is followed by the album's opener, "Welcome to Cabana" with Emeli Sandé and Tinie Tempah which describes Hotel Cabana as a mysterious place "full of drama" and haunted by "sleepless kids".[15] Meanwhile "Wonder" and "Lifted", both two of eight collaborations with Sandé, experiment with gospel music.[15][16] The latter collaboration contains elements of drum & bass and stadium music.[17] The Independent's Andy Gill also described the production on "Lifted" as a "[Naughty Boy] trademark Funky Drummer variant" with "quirkily looped strings and backing vocals".[13] It was the Sandé and Wretch 32 collaboration, "Pluto", that garnered some of the most positive comments, Gill said "Pluto" best exemplified Naughty Boy's signature sound, which was a "blend of vaunting synthesised strings and shuffling groove carries a two-way argument between Sandé and Wretch 32",[13] while Aizlewood called all of the Sandé collaborations "stellar".[5]

When conceiving the song "Hollywood", Naughty Boy originally considered asking Dame Shirley Bassey to sing the vocals, describing the situation as "epic", but in the end he thought it "would be too much". Upon hearing Gabrielle's song "Out of Reach" on the radio he said "her voice is so unique. It's not technically the best voice, but it stands on its own. It's incredible."[1] Digital Spy's Robert Copsey described the collaboration as "the spookiest of them all", centering on "how fame can be fleeting".[15] "No One's Here to Sleep", a collaboration with Bastille, combines indie music and dance-pop, with soulful vocals from Bastille's lead vocalist Dan Smith.[13] The lyrics center around the paranoia of fame.[15]

Release and promotion

Hotel Cabana was first released on 23 August 2013 in Germany,[16] Ireland[18] and Spain[19] by EMI and Universal Music. Its UK release came on 26 August 2013 through Naughty Boy's own production company Naughty Boy Recordings and Virgin EMI,[20] with the producer's official website selling 500 limited edition signed copies of the album.[21] In the following week, Hotel Cabana was released in Spain on 30 August[22] and in Italy on 3 September 2013.[23] It was released in Japan on 9 October through EMI Records Japan[24] while About.com's Bill Lamb confirmed that Capitol Records would be distributing the album at a later date in the United States.[25]

On 20 September 2012, Naughty Boy uploaded the first visual trailer for Hotel Cabana to his Vevo account.[26] To celebrate the success of single "La La La", in May 2013, Naughty Boy uploaded a mixtape of his inspirations for the album to his Soundcloud page.[10] On 17 July 2013, Naughty Boy premiered a second visual trailer for Hotel Cabana. The video, features Sandé, Bastille's Dan Smith, Professor Green, Wretch 32, Gabrielle and Sam Smith all arriving at the fictional Hotel Cabana, where Naughty Boy watches the arrivals on a TV screen.[27] Additionally, on 14 August 2013, "Think About It" featuring Wiz Khalifa and Ella Eyre, received its first play on BBC Radio 1Xtra's MistaJam radio show,[28] while "No One's Here to Sleep" featuring Bastille was released for free as a promotional single as part of iTunes "Single of the Week" in the UK, for the week beginning 26 August 2013.[29] On 18 August 2013, Sandé performed "Lifted" at the mainstage during her set at the 2013 V Festival in Chelmsford, England and reprised the song this time with Naughty Boy later that same day for his set at "Future Stage".[30] Sandé has also performed "Pluto" (without Wretch 32 or Naughty Boy) during her Our Version of Events Tour, the song is included on the DVD of her Live at the Royal Albert Hall concert album.[31]

On 12 August 2012, Music Week magazine confirmed that Naughty Boy's debut single would be titled "Wonder", and would feature frequent collaborator Emeli Sandé. A video directed by Nadia Otzen was produced for the song and it was scheduled to be released 30 September 2012.[32] However, the release of "Wonder" was delayed and the single was released 21 October 2012 instead.[33] Upon release, "Wonder" reached number six in Scotland,[34] eight in Ireland[35] and number ten on the UK Singles Chart.[36] Then over six months later, on 17 May 2013, Naughty Boy released "La La La", featuring British vocalist Sam Smith, was released as the album's second single.[37] Upon release, "La La La" became Naughty Boy's biggest hit to date, topping the UK Singles chart and UK Dance Chart.[38] It also reached number three in Ireland,[39] Italy[40] and Scotland[41] and five in the Netherlands.[42] "Lifted", another collaboration with Sandé, was released as the album's third single on 18 August 2013, preceding the album by a week.[43][44] "Lifted" became Naughty Boy's third top-ten single in Scotland and the UK, reaching number eight in both countries.[45][46] In Ireland, it was slightly less successful, reaching only number twenty-one.[47] "Think About It" featuring Wiz Khalifa and Ella Eyre was released as the album's fourth single on 17 November 2013.[2]

On 28 August 2013, in the mid-week charts update, the Official Charts Company revealed that Hotel Cabana was a contender to top the UK Albums Chart. At the half-way mark, it was just 3,600 copies behind the mid-week leader Hail to the King by US rock band Avenged Sevenfold.[48] On 1 September 2013, Hotel Cabana made its Scottish Albums Chart debut at number five and its UK Albums Chart debut at number two.[49][50] On the Irish Albums Chart it debuted at number twenty-five.[51] In Switzerland, the album debuted at number thirty-four but rose to a new peak of number eight in its second week on the chart.[52] Similarly in Belgium, on the Flanders Album Chart it debuted and number eighty-five and 120 on the Wallonia Albums Chart; in its second week it rose to number seventy-four and number seventy on the Flanders and Wallonia album charts respectively.[53][54]

On 3 September, Naughty Boy announced he was going on a UK tour in support of Hotel Cabana. He played for five dates, beginning with Brighton Concorde on 12 November 2013 and finishing O2 ABC in Glasgow on 17 November.[55]

List of UK tour dates and venues[56]
Date City Country Venue
12 November 2013 Brighton United Kingdom Concorde 2
13 November 2013 London Brixton Electric
15 November 2013 Birmingham The Institute
16 November 2013 Manchester Club Academy
17 November 2013 Glasgow O2 ABC

Critical response

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Daily Star (9/10)[9]
Digital Spy [15]
Gigwise [57]
The Guardian [58]
The Independent [13]
London Evening Standard [5]
musicOMH [59]
The Observer [60]
PopMatters (7/10)[61]
The Times [62]

The album received mostly positive reviews from music critics. Digital Spy's Robert Copsey gave the album four out of five stars, commenting that "Hotel Cabana succeeds in a task previously thought impossible: giving personality and depth to a features album." In his review, Copsey praised the strong opening section of the album, saying that "the concept of the record as a hotel gets off to a strong start, presented by George The Poet, [Emeli Sandé] and Tinie Tempah as a mysterious place 'full of drama' and haunted by 'sleepless kids'." However, he noted that some of the urban-pop sounds generic and despite "the concept starts to lose its footing around the halfway mark, the melodies remain tight, the beats super-slick and choruses radio-friendly throughout".[15] James Cabooter from the Daily Star also gave Hotel Cabana a positive review, commending Naughty Boy's "versatility", combining contemporary R&B, pop and hip hop music. Cabooter also complimented Naughty Boy's collaborations with Ed Sheeran ("Top Floor") and Sam Smith ("La La La").[9]

John Aizlewood from the London Evening Standard was confused about what Hotel Cabana was conceptualising but called Naughty Boy's collaborations with Sandé "stellar", particularly praising "Pluto" (also featuring Wretch 32) and "Wonder". Aizlewood praised the album as a complete body of work, saying that "the result sounds like a compilation album, but a filler-free one where almost every song is capable of standing alone."[5] The Independent's Andy Gill also gave Hotel Cabana a four star review like Aizlewood, and went on to call it the "Album of the Week". Gill also had praise for Sandé's involvement in the album, described as "an impassioned lead" and particularly focussed on "Pluto" as "one of the more successful pairings on an album".[13] However, not all of the reception was positive with The Observer's Kitty Empire describing the album as predictable. During her review Empire said "Hotel Cabana sounds as you would expect: homegrown, high-end urban pop that over-conceptualises the dangers of fame." She praised the Ella Eyre and Wiz Khalifa collaboration "Think About It" but described the remainder of the album as full of "disparate voices [that] give this album the disjointed feel of a showreel."[60]

Track listing

  • Hotel Cabana – Standard edition[44]
  • (catalogue number 0602537438563)[21]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
1. "Act I" (featuring George the Poet)
Naughty Boy 0:24
2. "Welcome to Cabana" (featuring Emeli Sandé & Tinie Tempah)
  • Naughty Boy
  • Craze & Hoax[a]
1:51
3. "Wonder" (featuring Emeli Sandé)
  • Khan
  • Hugo Chegwin
  • Harry Craze
  • Sandé
  • Naughty Boy
  • Craze & Hoax[a]
3:27
4. "Think About It" (featuring Wiz Khalifa & Ella Eyre)
  • Naughty Boy
  • Mojam[b]
3:05
5. "Hollywood" (featuring Gabrielle)
  • Khan
  • Sandé
  • Naughty Boy
  • Mojam[a]
4:05
6. "Act II" (featuring George the Poet)
  • Khan
  • Mpanga
Naughty Boy 0:20
7. "La La La" (featuring Sam Smith)
  • Khan
  • Jonny Coffer
  • Al-Hakam El Kaubaisy
  • Frobisher Mbabazi
  • Murray
  • Jimmy Napes
  • Omer
  • Sam Smith
  • Naughty Boy
  • Komi
  • Mojam[b]
3:42
8. "One Way" (featuring Mic Righteous & Maiday)
  • Khan
  • Rocky Takaloo
  • Rachel Moulden
  • Juby
Naughty Boy 3:26
9. "Pluto" (featuring Emeli Sandé & Wretch 32)
  • Naughty Boy
  • Craze & Hoax[a]
3:57
10. "So Strong" (featuring Chasing Grace)
  • Khan
  • Grace Ackerman
  • Philip Plested
Naughty Boy 3:36
11. "No One's Here to Sleep" (featuring Bastille)
  • Khan
  • Dan Smith
Naughty Boy 3:25
12. "Lifted" (featuring Emeli Sandé)
  • Khan
  • Sandé
  • Chegwin
  • Craze
  • Omer
  • Murray
  • Coffer
  • Naughty Boy
  • Mojam[a]
  • Craze & Hoax[a]
3:17
13. "Top Floor (Cabana)" (featuring Ed Sheeran)
  • Khan
  • Sheeran
Naughty Boy 2:09
14. "Epilogue" (featuring George the Poet)
  • Khan
  • Mpanga
Naughty Boy 1:28
Total length:
36:39
Bonus tracks[44]
No. TitleWriter(s)Producer(s) Length
15. "Never Be Your Woman" (Naughty Boy Presents Wiley featuring Emeli Sandé)
Naughty Boy 3:31
16. "Daddy (Ifan Dafydd Remix)" (Emeli Sandé featuring Naughty Boy)
  • Khan
  • Grant Mitchell
  • Murray
  • Omer
  • Sandé
  • Naughty Boy
  • Mojam[a]
  • Ifan Dafydd[c]
5:00
17. "Get Lucky" (featuring Tanika)
  • Naughty Boy
  • Wez[a]
4:17
18. "Lifted" (featuring Emeli Sandé & Professor Green)
  • Naughty Boy
  • Mojam[a]
  • Craze & Hoax[a]
4:16
Total length:
53:43
Notes

Credits and personnel

Recording
Management and creative[63]
  • Glyn Aikins – A&R
  • Tim Blacksmith – executive producer
  • Riki Bleau – executive producer
  • Danny D – executive producer
  • Check Morris – artwork
  • Dan Sanders – commissioner
Vocals[63]
Songwriters[63]
Musicians and Technicians[63]
  • Wez Clarke – mixdown engineer, additional programming
  • Jonny Coffer – strings
  • Craze & Hoax (Harry Craze & Hugo Chegwin) – producers, instruments, programming, recording technicians
  • Ifan Dafydd – remixer, additional production
  • Luke Juby – piano, saxophone, strings, acoustic guitar, bass strings, bass
  • Komi – producer, instruments, programming
  • Frobisher "Froby" Mbabzi – keyboards
  • Mojam (Mustafa Omer & James Murray) – producers, recording technicians, instruments, programming
  • Naughty Boy – producer, recording technician, instruments, programming
  • Daniela Rivera – assistant mastering engineer
  • Jonny Rocha – bass
  • Ed Sheeranguitar
  • Sunny – recording engineer
  • Jasmin Tadjiky – instruments, programming
  • Phil Tan – mastering engineer

Charts

Chart (2013) Peak
position
Australia Digital Albums (ARIA)[64] 30
Austria (Ö3 Austria)[65] 33
Belgium (Ultratop Flanders)[53] 74
Belgium (Ultratop Wallonia)[54] 70
Germany (Media Control)[66] 30
Ireland (ChartTrack)[51] 25
Italy (FIMI)[67] 78
Netherlands (MegaCharts)[68] 46
Scotland (OCC)[49] 5
South Korea (GAON)[69]

(International Albums Chart)

39
Switzerland (Hitparade)[52] 8
UK Albums Chart (OCC)[50] 2

Release history

Region Date Version Format Label
Belgium 23 August 2013 Standard edition[70] Digital download Universal Music
Germany Standard edition[16][71] Compact disc (CD), digital download EMI, Universal Music
Deluxe edition[72] Digital download
Ireland Standard edition[18]
Deluxe edition[73]
Netherlands Standard edition[74] Universal Music
Spain Standard edition[19]
Deluxe edition[75]
United Kingdom 26 August 2013 Standard edition[76][44] CD, digital download Naughty Boy, Virgin EMI
Deluxe edition[20] Digital download
Australia 30 August 2013 Standard edition[22][77] CD, digital download Universal Music
Italy 3 September 2013 Standard edition[23][78] CD, digital download
Deluxe edition[79] Digital download
Japan 9 October 2013 N/A CD[24] EMI Records Japan

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