Humanz

Humanz

Cover art for standard digital editions
Studio album by Gorillaz
Released 28 April 2017
Recorded September 2015 – late 2016
Studio
Genre
Length 49:19
Label
Producer
Gorillaz chronology
The Singles Collection 2001–2011
(2011)The Singles Collection 2001–20112011
Humanz
(2017)
Singles from Humanz
  1. "Saturnz Barz"
    Released: 23 March 2017
  2. "We Got the Power"
    Released: 23 March 2017
  3. "Ascension"
    Released: 23 March 2017
  4. "Andromeda"
    Released: 23 March 2017
  5. "Let Me Out"
    Released: 6 April 2017
  6. "The Apprentice"
    Released: 24 April 2017
  7. "Strobelite"
    Released: 4 August 2017

Humanz is the fifth studio album by British virtual band Gorillaz. The album was released on 28 April 2017 via Parlophone and Warner Bros. Records.[4][5] The album was announced on the band's official Instagram page on 23 March 2017.[6] According to a press release, the album was recorded in London, Paris, New York City, Chicago, and Jamaica and produced by Gorillaz, The Twilite Tone and Remi Kabaka, Jr.[7] It is the band's first studio album since 2011's The Fall, and features collaborations from several artists including Grace Jones, Kali Uchis, Vince Staples, Popcaan, D.R.A.M., Anthony Hamilton, De La Soul, Danny Brown, Kelela, Mavis Staples, Pusha T, and Benjamin Clementine.

Background

In 2010, Gorillaz released the album, The Fall, and then the internet rumours circulating that Gorillaz creators Damon Albarn and Jamie Hewlett had fallen out that led to the band split, which People subsequently reported as true.[8] Representatives for the band denied the rumours in a statement to Pitchfork.[9] Gorillaz released a single with James Murphy and André 3000 commissioned by Converse, titled "DoYaThing" on 23 February 2012. In April 2012, in an interview with The Guardian, Damon Albarn stated that Gorillaz were "unlikely" to release new music, citing Hewlett's dissatisfaction that his animation had become less central to the band and their performances.[10] In June 2013, Hewlett said that he "believe[s] there is a future for the Gorillaz. But Gorillaz is quite a complicated and expensive thing to produce. So, I think we need to wait a little bit to see what happens because usually in the music industry everything changes."[11]

Albarn released a solo album, Everyday Robots, on 25 April 2014. Hewlett revealed that he and Albarn decided to revive Gorillaz after Albarn had played a gig, "...we were at a party afterwards. We'd had a bit to drink, and he said, 'Do you want to do another one?' And I said, 'Do you?' and he said, 'Do you?' And I said, 'Yeah, sure.' I started work on it straight away, learning to draw the characters again. I played around by myself for eight months while he was performing with Blur in 2015."[12] In October 2014, Albarn was said to be "in the process of reactivating Gorillaz for a 2016 release."[13] In an Instagram post on 30 January 2015, Hewlett posted new drawings of fictional band members Murdoc and Noodle. He also responded to a fan's query by stating, "Yes Gorillaz Returns."[14] Damon Albarn's band Blur released their eighth studio album The Magic Whip on 27 April 2015. Before Blur's tour in support of The Magic Whip, Albarn said, "I'm starting recording in September for a new Gorillaz record."[15] On 19 January 2017, Gorillaz released the first track from the album, "Hallelujah Money" featuring Benjamin Clementine, accompanied by a music video as a non-commercial single on Uproxx's YouTube channel.[16][17][18]

Musical style and themes

Albarn has said that with Humanz he set out to create something not overtly political, but "an emotional response to politics".[19] The album's overarching theme is the emotional aftermath of an unexpected world-changing event. Albarn removed all references to Donald Trump on the album, saying "There's no references to [Trump] on the record – in fact, any time when anyone made any reference, I edited it out. I don't want to give the most famous man on earth any more fame, particularly. He doesn't need it!"[20] There is however, a bonus track called "The Apprentice", referencing his former reality show. At one point, the album was called Transformerz, although this was later abandoned, for fear of confusion with the film series of the same name.[21]

Albarn was honoured at the Ivor Novello Awards where he picked up the lifetime achievement award for his work with Blur, Gorillaz, The Good, the Bad & the Queen, as well as his myriad of soundtracks and other work. During his acceptance speech, he spoke out about his love of the band Simple Minds and how they may be shaping the new Gorillaz record: "From someone who grew up in Leytonstone, it was a culture shock to say the least. Anyway, we were in this band and we had a guitarist who was an Edge from U2 obsessive, but we had a more kind of loose bass player who was really Simple Minds. Graham and me were a bit kind of more mercurial about what we like and what we don't like, but they were more adamant. Looking back at it now, I loved pretending that I was in U2, but I just think that Simple Minds were cooler. "Promised You a Miracle" – I listened to it when I started doing this new Gorillaz record and it just blew my mind, and it blew everyone who I was working with's mind. They hadn't even heard of Simple Minds, and they loved it – so that's testament to it being incredible."[22][23][24]

Recording

Prior to studio recording, Albarn made use of iPad applications such as GarageBand to create the framework for each song. Albarn had previously utilised his iPad as an audio workstation for The Fall, touting its convenience over the 4-Track recorder he'd previously used for preliminary music production.[25]

To guide collaborators into the "dark fantasy" setting that Albarn envisioned for Humanz, Albarn instructed guest artists to imagine a future in which Donald Trump had won the 2016 US presidential election. As recording for Humanz began well before Trump had secured the Republican presidential nomination, much less the presidency, the possibility of a Trump presidency was still considered remote by many; collaborator Pusha T (who recorded his contribution in early 2016) later commented on Albarn's inadvertent foresight, saying: "I wrote from the perspective of this day, I was writing from the perspective of a Trump win. When this really happened, I was like 'Wait a minute, what type of crystal ball did this guy have? Why are you even asking me to think along these lines?' I don't think he thought that [Trump] would win, I'm not gonna go that far, but he definitely conceptualised this whole thing."[26]

In April 2016, Hewlett uploaded two video clips onto his Instagram showing the continued work on the album. The first clip featured Liam Bailey and The Twilite Tone. The second clip was a time-lapse video featuring Albarn, Remi Kabaka, Twilite Tone and Jean-Michel Jarre.[27][28][29] On 17 May 2016, Gorillaz were in the studio with Chicago-based hip hop artist Vic Mensa, although Bailey and Mensa's contributions were ultimately left off of the finished album.[30][31][32][33]

Jamaican singer and supermodel Grace Jones, one of the many collaborators on the album, features on the song "Charger". The song was a result of hours of ad-libbing over an instrumental.[21]

In an interview with Q magazine, Albarn revealed that he reached out to collaborate with a number of different artists, many of whom turned him down, including English musician Morrissey, Dionne Warwick – who was unwilling to collaborate as some lyrics on the record conflicted with her religious views, singer Sade, and American rapper Rick Ross.[34][35][36] Albarn also revealed in an interview with Song Exploder, that the song "Andromeda", featured a more prominent role for rapper D.R.A.M. and at one point, featured contributions from Rag'n'Bone Man (which was ultimately discarded) and with French singer-songwriter Christine and the Queens, which was also unsuccessful.[37][38] The group also reportedly recorded with Erykah Badu, whom Albarn had previously worked with on his Rocket Juice & the Moon project.[39]

The song "Charger" with Grace Jones was a result of Jones singing over the song's instrumental for four hours, ad-libbing and vibing to it. Overwhelmed by the length of the vocals recorded, Albarn had his studio floor covered in cut up pieces of paper with everything Jones had recorded, finding the fragments that worked and eventually crafting the song from there. A photo of this was also uploaded to Kabaka's Instagram, with the album's other executive producer The Twilite Tone, attempting to place the lyrics in an order for the song. Albarn also revealed that an unnamed collaborator's original vocals were removed from the song, so as to accommodate Jones' vocals.[21][40][41]

"We Got the Power" features guest vocals from Jehnny Beth, the lead singer of the British band Savages, as well as backing vocals from American rapper D.R.A.M. and English singer Noel Gallagher. Albarn welcomed the arrival of Beth as the album was meant to be "a series of conversations between men and women". He hailed her performance, saying: "She sounds like herself, but there are also strong echoes of Siouxsie Sioux. She’s brilliant."[12] The song is a particular landmark for Albarn and Gallagher, after their public dislike of each other during what was dubbed by the media as "The Battle of Britpop" in the 1990s. At one point, the song featured backing vocals from Albarn's Blur bandmate Graham Coxon, however his vocals were removed from the final version of the song.[42][43] "At one point this song had Graham, Noel and me on it and it was sort of heading slightly in the wrong direction. It was becoming almost retro in its sort of spirit and way too rocky for this record so I kind of stripped it right back down again. We play it slightly different live than how it is on the record. It's sort of the song that comes on during the final titles of a film. The climax. I thought Jehnny would take a bit of the testosterone off", Albarn said in an interview with Radio X. He also spoke of working with Gallagher for the first time, which Albarn was very complimentary: "He's fantastic in the studio. It's nice when you see how someone goes about their business. He's great". The song itself started after Albarn was given a Casio MT-40 for his birthday and he began composing the barebones of a demo, which was later fleshed out to become "We Got the Power". The idea to include Jehnny Beth, came about after XL Recordings founder Richard Russell said that Gallagher and Albarn were "were two rich middle-aged men singing about having the power, which is not a good look", Beth wrote her own lyrics to be included on the song as well as the lyrics that Albarn and Gallagher had also written.[12][44][45][46]

"Andromeda", the album's fourth single, was dedicated to Ethel, the mother of Albarn's longtime partner Suzi Winstanley, who died while Albarn was writing the song. Ethel's death reminded Albarn of Bobby Womack, who had appeared on the group's single "Stylo" and "Cloud of Unknowing" from their album Plastic Beach and appeared on the song "Bobby in Phoenix" from The Fall. Albarn and Russell had also produced Womack's comeback album The Bravest Man in the Universe, prior to Womack's death in June 2014. The sentimentality Albarn felt for lost family and friends was instrumental in the creation of "Andromeda", with Albarn commenting on the song's message: "Take the worst possible outcome, be brave, and remember all the goodness that preceded that... all the beauty that preceded that."[47] Albarn also stated that after a conversation with producer The Twilite Tone, he tried to evoke the sound of Michael Jackson's 1983 single "Billie Jean" from his iconic Thriller album and Hall and Oates' single "I Can't Go for That (No Can Do)", from their album Private Eyes. Twilite Tone produced the song, while Albarn took care of lyrics, The song features D.R.A.M., who originally had a more prominent feature on the song, with a full chorus and verse, however, Albarn stripped the vocals back as the song felt more complete. At one point, the song's name was "I Can't Go for Billie Jean", as a reference to the aforementioned Michael Jackson song.[47]

De La Soul had previously appeared on Gorillaz previous albums Demon Days and Plastic Beach on the songs "Feel Good Inc" and "Superfast Jellyfish" respectively, and appear on the album's fifth track "Momentz". Albarn revealed that the song was initially supposed to feature American stand-up comedian and actor Dave Chappelle, however, he became convinced after chatting to De La Soul member, Posdnuos. "I didn't hear De La Soul for that. Posdnous shows up. He said, 'I want to do something.' We were trying to get Dave Chappelle to do that. But he knows Pos, and somehow, that's how that happened."[41]

Albarn revealed that there would be alternate versions of songs that would be released, one included an extended version of "Andromeda" with rapper D.R.A.M. and a Middle-Eastern version of "Busted and Blue", which was discovered to feature Syrian musician Faia Younan, who had previously collaborated with Albarn on the Africa Express project The Orchestra of Syrian Musicians and Guests, on which she was featured on the song "Yah Mahla El Fus'ha".[48] While alternate versions of songs also exists, there are also songs that did not make the album, which were registered online by the group, which revealed that the band had collaborated further with Sidiki Diabaté, Little Simz and Azekel (who has backing vocals on the song "Momentz").[49][50]

Release and promotion

Four separate covers were created for the physical release of Humanz, each depicting one of the four cartoon band members rendered in a photorealistic style.[51]

On 6 March 2017, Gorillaz announced they were headlining their own festival called "Demon Dayz" at Margate, England. It took place on 10 June at the Dreamland amusement park, with free access to rides, and was also e broadcast live, via Red Bull TV. The tickets were put on sale in the morning of 10 March, at 9:00am, and they sold out hours later.[52] The festival was revealed to feature a number of collaborators from the album and other musicians that influenced the band, such as Vince Staples, De La Soul, Fufanu, Danny Brown, Little Simz, Kali Uchis, Popcaan and Kilo Kish.[53]

On 23 March 2017, four new songs were premiered on various radio stations: "Saturnz Barz" and "Andromeda" on BBC Radio 1, "We Got the Power" on Radio X, and "Ascension" on Beats 1.[54] The same day, all four songs were released for download, and a music video for "Saturnz Barz" was released, being the first music video featuring the Gorillaz characters since 2012's "DoYaThing".

The same day, Gorillaz redesigned their website and announced a secret live concert at Printworks Nightclub, London, on the evening of 24 March 2017, featuring the first full performance of the album, and made a livestream on their Facebook page at the event.[55]

The fifth single from Humanz, "Let Me Out" featuring Mavis Staples and Pusha T, was released on 6 April 2017.[56]

A Gorillaz themed augmented reality app created in collaboration with Electronic Beats was released on 10 April 2017, in which users can interact with Murdoc, 2D, Noodle, and Russel, and can tour the band's new studios and listen to playlists made by the members.[57] The next day, Gorillaz announced that the app will also be used to host the "Humanz House Party", a listening event touted as the "largest ever geo-specific listening experience." It took place on April 21 through 23, a week before the album release, and allowed fans to be the first to hear the new album in full.[58] At the same time, Jamie Hewlett revealed in an interview with Q magazine that a 10-episode Gorillaz TV show was in the works.[59]

On 17 April 2017, the Humanz Tour was formally announced on the band's official website, with concerts in Europe, Asia, North and South America.

Reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic77/100[60]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[3]
Consequence of SoundB-[61]
Evening Standard[62]
Exclaim!8/10[63]
The Guardian[64]
The Independent[65]
NME[66]
Pitchfork6.9/10[67]
Q[68]
Rolling Stone[69]

Humanz received generally positive reviews from critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 77, based on 32 reviews.[60]

Common points of praise from reviewers pertain to the album's political themes, as well as its dark, yet playful "party" sound. Josh Gray of Clash felt that the band had "created their most youthful album yet; a vibrant record which paints a picture of the near future so vivid it seems convincingly real."[70] Kenneth Partridge from Paste gave it a 8.5 rating and wrote "The result: the most vibrant, consistently engaging Gorillaz album yet".[71] Writing for Exclaim!, Cam Lindsay posited that despite the album lacking any "Apple-friendly jingles", it "makes up for it with palatably overarching political themes and sequencing that gives it the wildly entertaining feel of a circus show."[63] Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic thought of the album as more wild and unruly than the band's previous album, Plastic Beach, due to the bigger focus on individual tracks as opposed to an overarching concept. He also noted that despite the album's very heavy R&B vibe and political undercurrent, he felt the album overall was "strangely uplifting, as if every musician who entered the studio found solace in the act of creation."[3]

Niall Doherty of Q magazine pointed out Albarn's diminished vocal influence on the album compared to the two albums he had been involved with prior, Everyday Robots and The Magic Whip, concluding the review with "What Humanz lacks in memorable hooks, it makes up for in fist-clenching spirit – and 'We Got The Power' sums that up best. A defiant anthem featuring a thrilling turn from Savages' singer Jehnny Beth, it ensures an album about wading through the dark days ends on a triumphant note."[68] Some reviewers overall felt that much of the band itself and its "cartoon image" fell to the wayside in the wake of its many collaborators. Consequence of Sound writer Nina Corcoran gave Humanz a B– grade, stating "In the end, Humanz structures itself like we’re watching Gorillaz host a party in a trendy club, all while the world burns. By positioning its four digital members just outside of the line of vision, though, it feels like an outlier in the band’s catalog — which isn’t necessarily a bad thing."[72]

The structure of the album has had some critics draw comparisons to Drake's More Life.[64][68] In terms of the album structure, critics have been more mixed. In a generally positive review, Alexis Petridis of The Guardian acknowledged the album as a "scattershot collection of tracks, rather than a coherent album."[64] Record Collector thought of it both as a flaw but also its strength, stating that "the album throws it all at you in one gloriously delirious barrage that has no real anchor."[73] Will Hermes of Rolling Stone wrote "If it's an uneven LP, it's fairly brilliant by mixtape standards, which may be the best way to measure it."[69]

Track listing

All tracks are produced by Damon Albarn, The Twilite Tone of D/\P and Remi Kabaka; except for "The Apprentice", which features additional production by Fraser T Smith. Writing credits adapted from the album's liner notes.

Humanz – Standard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Intro: I Switched My Robot Off"0:23
2."Ascension" (featuring Vince Staples)2:36
3."Strobelite" (featuring Peven Everett)
  • Albarn
  • Peven Everett
4:32
4."Saturnz Barz" (featuring Popcaan)3:01
5."Momentz" (featuring De La Soul)3:16
6."Interlude: The Non-Conformist Oath"0:21
7."Submission" (featuring Danny Brown and Kelela)
3:21
8."Charger" (featuring Grace Jones)
  • Albarn
  • Grace Jones
3:33
9."Interlude: Elevator Going Up"
  • Albarn
0:04
10."Andromeda" (featuring D.R.A.M.)3:17
11."Busted and Blue"
  • Albarn
4:37
12."Interlude: Talk Radio"
  • Albarn
0:19
13."Carnival" (featuring Anthony Hamilton)
  • Albarn
  • Anthony Hamilton
2:15
14."Let Me Out" (featuring Mavis Staples and Pusha T)
2:55
15."Interlude: Penthouse"
  • Albarn
0:11
16."Sex Murder Party" (featuring Jamie Principle and Zebra Katz)
4:19
17."She's My Collar" (featuring Kali Uchis)3:29
18."Interlude: The Elephant"
  • Albarn
0:11
19."Hallelujah Money" (featuring Benjamin Clementine)4:23
20."We Got the Power" (featuring Jehnny Beth)
  • Albarn
  • Jehnny Beth
2:17
Total length:49:19

Sample credits

Personnel

  • Damon Albarn – vocals, all instruments, producer (all tracks)
  • The Twilite Tone of D/\P – producer (all tracks)
  • Remi Kabaka – producer (all tracks)
  • Jamie Hewlett – artwork and design
  • Fraser T Smith – production consultant (all tracks), additional production (track 22)
  • Stephen Sedgwick – audio mixing, audio engineering (all tracks)
  • John Davies – audio mastering (all tracks)
  • Ben Mendelsohn – narration (tracks 1, 5, 9, 12, 15, 18, 21)
  • Vince Staples – vocals (track 2)
  • The Humanz[a] – additional vocals (tracks 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 14, 19, 23, 24, 26)
  • Michael Law Thomas – additional engineering (track 2)
  • Samuel Egglenton – additional engineering (track 8), assistant (tracks 2–5, 7, 10, 11, 13, 14, 16, 17, 19, 20)
  • KT Pipal – assistant (tracks 2–5, 7, 17, 19)
  • Casey Cuyao – assistant (track 2)
  • Peven Everett – vocals (tracks 3, 23) additional keyboards (track 3, 23)
  • Popcaan – vocals (track 4)
  • De La Soul – vocals (track 5)
  • Azekel – additional vocals (track 5)
  • Jean-Michel Jarre – synthesizers (tracks 5, 20, 23)
  • Morgan Garcia – additional engineering (track 5)
  • Danny Brown – vocals (track 7)
  • Kelela – vocals (track 7), additional vocals (track 11)
  • Graham Coxon – guitars (track 7)
  • J.U.S. – additional engineering (track 7)
  • Grace Jones – vocals (track 8)
  • D.R.A.M. vocals (track 10), additional vocals (track 20)
  • Roses Gabor – additional vocals (track 10)
  • Anthony Hamilton – vocals (track 13)
  • Mavis Staples – vocals (track 14)
  • Pusha T – vocals (track 14)
  • Paul Bailey – additional engineering (track 14)
  • Alex Baez – assistant (track 14)
  • Jonathan Lackey – assistant (track 14)
  • Jamie Principle – vocals (track 16)
  • Zebra Katz – vocals (tracks 16, 22, 24)
  • Kali Uchis – vocals (tracks 17, 25)
  • Benjamin Clementine – vocals (track 19)
  • Jehnny Beth – vocals (track 20)
  • Noel Gallagher – additional vocals (track 20)
  • Rag'n'Bone Man – vocals (track 22)
  • Ray BLK – vocals (track 22)
  • Kilo Kish – vocals (track 24)
  • Imani Vonshà – vocals (track 24)
  • Carly Simon – vocals (track 25)
  • Cheick Tidiane Seck – additional keyboards (track 25)
  • Brandon Markell Holmes – vocals (track 26)

Notes

Charts

Chart (2017) Peak
position
Argentine Albums (CAPIF)[76] 6
Australian Albums (ARIA)[77] 4
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[78] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[79] 1
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[80] 3
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[81] 2
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[82] 8
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[83] 6
Dutch Albums (MegaCharts)[84] 6
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[85] 10
French Albums (SNEP)[86] 2
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[87] 3
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[88] 7
Irish Albums (IRMA)[89] 2
Italian Albums (FIMI)[90] 3
Mexican Albums (AMPROFON)[91] 3
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[92] 3
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[93] 4
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[94] 16
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[95] 3
Scottish Albums (OCC)[96] 1
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[97] 4
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[98] 9
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[99] 1
UK Albums (OCC)[100] 2
US Billboard 200[101] 2
US Top Rock Albums (Billboard)[102] 1

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/Sales
United Kingdom (BPI)[103] Silver 60,000^

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

References

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