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| alt =
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| released = {{Start date|2020|1|17}}
| released = {{Start date|2020|1|17}}
| recorded = 2018-2019
| recorded = 2018–2019
| genre = <!-- Sourced in the "Background and sound" section. Please source any other genres added here. -->
| genre = <!-- Sourced in the "Background and sound" section. Please source any other genres added here. -->
* [[Electropop]]
* [[Electropop]]

Revision as of 23:55, 14 February 2020

Manic
Studio album by
ReleasedJanuary 17, 2020 (2020-01-17)
Recorded2018–2019
Genre
Length47:36
LabelCapitol
Producer
Halsey chronology
Hopeless Fountain Kingdom
(2017)
Manic
(2020)
Singles from Manic
  1. "Without Me"
    Released: October 4, 2018
  2. "Graveyard"
    Released: September 13, 2019
  3. "You Should Be Sad"
    Released: January 10, 2020

Manic (stylised as (Manic)) is the third studio album by American singer Halsey. It was released on January 17, 2020 through Capitol Records.[1] It features guest appearances by Dominic Fike, Alanis Morissette, and Suga of BTS and samples of Kate Winslet, John Mayer,[2] Amanda Seyfried, and Megan Fox.[3]

The album was commercially successful, debuting in the top ten in several countries, including Australia, Canada, Czech Republic, Finland, Ireland, New Zealand, Scotland, the UK, and the US. It also reached the top 20 in Denmark, Germany, Italy, and Norway.

Musically, Manic is primarily an electropop, hip hop, and alternative rock record with influences of several other genres including, country, K-pop, pop, R&B, among others. Halsey described the album as changing its mind as much as she does.[4] Production was handled by Halsey herself, being her first album to do so, and her frequent collaborators, such as Benny Blanco, Cashmere Cat, Lido, and Greg Kurstin, as well as new producers like Jon Bellion, FINNEAS, Louis Bell, and The Monsters and the Strangerz, among others.

The album was preceded by the release of six singles: "Without Me", "Graveyard", "Clementine", "Finally // Beautiful Stranger", "Suga's Interlude", and "You Should Be Sad". To promote the album, Halsey embarked on her third concert tour, the Manic World Tour, following its release.[5]

Background and sound

On October 4, 2018, Halsey released the song "Without Me", which was the first solo material since her second studio album Hopeless Fountain Kingdom (2017).[6] Originally, the song was intended as a standalone track,[7] but was later included on the record, becoming the actual lead single. In March 2019, Halsey announced that her third studio album would be released in 2020 and that she wanted it to be "perfect".[8] The standalone single, "Nightmare" , released on May 17, 2019, was originally intended to be the lead single from the album.[9][10][11] A scene in the music video for “Nightmare” showed Halsey holding a newspaper reading "MANIC" and another scene where she holds a sign reading "H3 / AI / 10--2019", with the actual day not shown, which some speculated as a hint that the album would be released in October 2019.[12] However, it was released on January 17, 2020.

During a question-and-answer session on August 7, 2019, she stated that the album is "less dystopian fantasy world" and that it reflects her current worldview.[13] In her Rolling Stone cover story, Halsey stated that Manic is a sampling of "hip-hop, rock, country, fucking everything — because it’s so manic. It’s soooooo manic. It’s literally just, like, whatever the fuck I felt like making; there was no reason I couldn’t make it".[14]

She revealed the album title on her social media on September 12, 2019, along with an official link to a website with the album title.[15] The website contained a livestream of the singer painting the album cover.[16] The album is set to have 16 tracks on the standard edition.[17]

She revealed the tracklist on December 3, 2019, and went live on Instagram shortly after to discuss the album and answer fan questions. During the live, she stated that the album is very personal in which saying, "I feel like you guys have really given me the chance this year to express myself more and be myself in a way that I don’t know if I’ve really felt like I have been able to since my first album". She also stated that fans would get to meet a part of her that she’s been really excited to show. When asked what her favorite song is, she said that the most personal one is "More", and not being able to pick just one, she listed some of her favorites which include, "I Hate Everybody", "929", "Killing Boys", and "Dominic’s Interlude".

The album was revealed to have three features including Dominic Fike, Alanis Morissette, and Suga of BTS. Halsey describes them as “People who really represent different parts of my psyche and different parts of my personality in so many different ways”.

Manic is a "busy album"[18] and a "raw and honest look into Halsey's head and heart",[19] on which she explores many genres, including "electro-pop, sparkly ballads, hip-hop, twang, and '90s alt rock"[20] and "everything from Lilith Fair folk guitar to South Korean rap".[21]. Lyrically, it deals with the singer's struggles with bipolar disorder (previously known as manic depression).[22]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?7.5/10[23]
Metacritic80/100[24]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[25]
Entertainment WeeklyB+[26]
Exclaim!8/10[27]
The Guardian[28]
The Line of Best Fit9/10[29]
NME[30]
Pitchfork6.5/10[31]
PopMatters[32]
Rolling Stone[33]
Slant[34]

Manic received critical acclaim. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 80 out of 100, which indicates "generally favorable reviews" based on 18 reviews.[24]

Rob Sheffield of Rolling Stone gave the album a positive review and named Manic an "excellent new album", praising its versatility of genres and "Halsey's raw autobiographical portrait of [herself] as a young mess, craving her share of love and tenderness in a hostile world".[33] In a four-star review for The Guardian, Ben Beaumont-Thomas praised Halsey's lyrical evolution, citing that "her lyrical confidence is matched by the characterful production, which straddles R&B, country, trashy pop-rock, Kacey Musgraves-ish cosmic Americana and more".[28]

Commercial performance

Manic debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 with 239,000 album-equivalent units, of which 180,000 were pure album sales. It is Halsey's third top-two album and also her biggest opening week so far on the chart.[35] In Australia the album debuted at number two becoming Halsey's third consecutive album to get blocked from the top spot in the nation.

In the UK the album debuted and peaked at number six becoming Halsey's first top ten album there.

Promotion

Singles

On October 4, 2018, Halsey released "Without Me" after teasing the song a few weeks prior during a show in London on September 23, 2018. It was followed by a Spotify vertical video released on October 12, 2018, and a music video a few weeks later on October 29, 2018. The song became commercially successful, being certified quintuple Platinum in Canada and the US, sextuplet Platinum in Australia, Platinum in the UK, and reached the top three in several countries including, Australia, Canada, and the UK. The song also topped the US Billboard Hot 100, spending two weeks at number one, becoming her first chart-topping song as a lead artist.[36] It went on to spend 29 weeks in the top ten of the Billboard Hot 100, making it the third longest-running top ten song by a female artist, behind only Billie Eilish’s "Bad Guy" and LeAnn Rimes' "How Do I Live", and became her third song to spend over a year on the Billboard Hot 100, becoming the only female artist in history to achieve this. It was ranked number three on the 2019 Billboard Year End Chart and number 12 on the 2010s’ Billboard Decade End Chart. The song was promoted by several live performances including ones on The Voice, The Ellen DeGeneres Show, Saturday Night Live, the 2018 Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show, and the 2019 Billboard Music Awards. The song was followed by two remixes, one featuring American DJ Illenium, and one featuring American rapper Juice WRLD. Originally intended to be a standalone single, the song was included in the album’s final tracklisting, serving as the album’s lead single.

On September 3, 2019, Halsey announced "Graveyard" as the album's second single through her social media, revealing the cover art and release date and was made available for pre-save the same day.[37][38] Halsey performed the song for the first time two days prior to its release on September 11, 2019 at Rihanna's Savage X Fenty show as one of the musical guests.[39] The song was released on September 13, 2019, along with the album preorder, and impacted US radio on September 17, 2019.[40] The accompanying music video was released on October 8, 2019 which features actress, Sydney Sweeney. The song peaked at number 34 on the Billboard Hot 100 and has been certified Platinum in Australia and Gold in Canada and the US.

On September 29, 2019, to celebrate her birthday, Halsey released a promotional single, "Clementine", as a surprise with no prior announcement.[41] The music video was released the same day.[42]

On December 3, 2019, during an Instagram live, Halsey revealed that two new songs and a music video would be released the following Friday on December 6, 2019. The next day she announced through social media that "Finally // Beautiful Stranger" and "Suga's Interlude" would be the songs she was releasing, serving as two additional promotional singles before the album.[43] A music video for "Finally // Beautiful Stranger" was released along with the songs.[44] While neither entered the Billboard Hot 100, "Finally // Beautiful Stranger" entered the Bubbling Under Hot 100 at number 17 and "Suga's Interlude" peaked at number nine on the US Pop Digital Song Sales chart.[45][46]

On January 8, 2020, Halsey announced through social media that she would be releasing the album's third official single, "You Should Be Sad", along with its accompanying music video on January 10, 2020, one week ahead of the album's release.[47][48] The song impacted US radio on January 14, 2020.[49] It has since peaked at number 26 on the Billboard Hot 100.[50]

Track listing

Credits adapted from Tidal[51] and CMG Credits.[3] Halsey revealed the tracklist on her Instagram on December 3, 2019.[52]

Manic – Standard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Ashley"
3:06
2."Clementine"
  • Frangipane
  • Johnathan Carter Cunningham
  • Jasper Sheff
  • John Cunningham
  • Halsey
3:54
3."Graveyard"3:01
4."You Should Be Sad"
Kurstin3:25
5."Forever ... (Is a Long Time)"
2:47
6."Dominic's Interlude" (with Dominic Fike)
  • Frangipane
  • Fike
  • Losnegård
  • Andrew Jackson
  • Duck Blackwell
  • Halsey
  • Lido
  • Jackson
  • Blackwell
1:16
7."I Hate Everybody"
2:51
8."3AM"
  • Frangipane
  • Kurstin
Kurstin3:54
9."Without Me"
Bell3:21
10."Finally // Beautiful Stranger"
  • Frangipane
  • Kurstin
Kurstin3:41
11."Alanis' Interlude" (with Alanis Morissette)
  • Frangipane
  • Morissette
  • Losnegård
  • Mike Farrell
  • Halsey
  • Lido
2:41
12."Killing Boys"
  • Cunningham
  • Halsey
2:23
13."Suga's Interlude" (with Suga of BTS)
  • Halsey
  • Lido
  • Suga
  • Pdogg
2:18
14."More"
  • Frangipane
  • Ammar Malik
  • Levin[e]
  • Andrew Wells
  • Dave Lubben
  • Kevin Snevely
  • Høiberg
  • Losnegård
  • Halsey
  • Lido
  • Wells[a]
2:33
15."Still Learning"
  • Bell
  • FRED
3:31
16."929"
  • Frangipane
  • Cunningham
  • Sheff
  • Sheff
  • Cunningham
2:54
Total length:47:36
Manic Target exclusive and overseas deluxe edition bonus tracks[53]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
17."You Should Be Sad" (original voicenote)FrangipaneHalsey2:13
18."I'm Not Mad"
  • Frangipane
  • Cunningham
Cunningham2:53
Total length:52:02
Manic – Japanese edition bonus track[54]
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
19."Wipe Your Tears"
  • Frangipane
  • Cunningham[55]
Cunningham1:51
Total length:53:53

Notes

  • ^[a] signifies as an additional producer
  • ^[e] signifies as an executive producer
  • Standard vinyl edition excludes "Alanis' Interlude", "Killing Boys", and "Suga's Interlude".[56]
  • "Clementine", "3AM", "Killing Boys", and "Wipe Your Tears" are stylized in all lowercase.[55][57][58][59][60][61][62]
  • "You Should Be Sad", "Forever ... (Is a Long Time)", and "Finally // Beautiful Stranger" are stylized in sentence case.[62]
  • "I Hate Everybody" is stylized in all upper case.[62]
  • Suga in "Suga's Interlude" is stylized in all upper case.[62]
  • "3AM" includes an uncredited appearance from singer John Mayer, in the form of a voicemail.[63]

Samples

Personnel

Credits adapted from CMG Credits.[3]

Performers and musicians

  • Halsey – vocals
  • Dominic Fike – vocals (track 6)
  • Alanis Morissette – vocals (track 11)
  • Suga – vocals (track 13)
  • Benny Blanco – keyboards (track 1, 5, 7, 12)
  • Alex Young – keyboards (track 1)
  • Cashmere Cat – keyboards (track 1, 5, 7, 14)
  • Amy Allen – background vocals, guitar (track 3)
  • Jasper Sheff – drums, piano (track 2) guitar (track 16)
  • Louis Bell – keyboards (track 3)
  • The Monsters & Strangerz – keyboards (track 3)
  • Jon Bellion – keyboards (track 3)
  • Mark Williams – guitar, keyboards (track 3)
  • Greg Kurstin – drums, lap steel guitar (track 4) acoustic guitar, bass, electric guitar, mellotron, percussion (track 8, 10)
  • Happy Perez – guitar (track 12) keyboards, guitar (track 5, 7)
  • Finneas – keyboards (track 7)
  • Chad Smith – drums (track 8)
  • Johnathan Carter Cunningham – drums, guitar (track 12) guitar (track 16)
  • Lido – keyboards (track 14)

Production

  • Halsey – production
  • Benny Blanco – production, programming (track 1, 5, 7, 12, 14), engineering (track 5, 7, 12, 14), executive producer (album)
  • Alex Young – programming (track 1)
  • Cashmere Cat – programming (track 1, 5, 7, 14)
  • Brenton Duvall – programming (track 1)
  • John Cunningham – programming (track 2, 12, 19) engineering (track 16)
  • Louis Bell – programming (track 3, 9, 15) engineering (track 9)
  • The Monsters & Strangerz – programming (track 3)
  • Mark Williams – programming (track 3)
  • Alex Pasco – engineering (track 4, 8, 10)
  • Greg Kurstin – engineering (track 4, 8, 10)
  • Julian Burg – engineering (track 4, 10)
  • Ed Reyes – assistant engineering (track 4, 8, 10)
  • Lido – programming (track 5, 6, 7, 11, 13, 14) engineering (track 6, 11, 13)
  • Happy Perez – programming (track 5, 7, 12)
  • Finneas – programming (track 7)
  • Julian Burg – engineering (track 8)
  • Scott Moore – engineering (track 8)
  • Ricardo Gama – recording (track 9)
  • Daniel S. Acorsi – recording (track 9)
  • Chris Sclafani – engineering (track 12, 14)
  • Suga – programming (track 13)
  • Pdogg – programming (track 13)
  • Andrew Wells – engineering (track 14)
  • Fred – co-producer (track 15)
  • Jasper Sheff – programming (track 16)
  • Chris Gehringer – engineering (track 19)
  • Will Quinnell – assistant engineering (track 19)
  • Serban Ghenea – mixing (track 19)
  • John Hanes – mixing (track 19)

Design

  • Garrett Hilliker – art direction
  • Arjun Pulijal – product manager
  • Katie Spoleti – product manager
  • Talisa Gurunian – product manager
  • Tony Bisogno – production
  • Jill Lamothe – production

Release history

Country Date Format Version Label Ref.
Various January 17, 2020 Deluxe Capitol [65]
LP Standard [66]
February 14, 2020 Cassette Deluxe [67]
March 20, 2020 LP [68]

Charts

Chart (2020) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[69] 2
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[70] 10
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[71] 9
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[72] 29
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[73] 2
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[74] 6
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[75] 23
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[76] 11
Estonian Albums (Eesti Ekspress)[77] 4
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[78] 6
French Albums (SNEP)[79] 34
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[80] 13
Irish Albums (OCC)[81] 8
Italian Albums (FIMI)[82] 12
Japan Hot Albums (Billboard Japan)[83] 57
Japanese Albums (Oricon)[84] 83
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[85] 4
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[86] 12
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[87] 15
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[88] 22
Scottish Albums (OCC)[89] 5
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[90] 6
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[91] 27
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[92] 10
UK Albums (OCC)[93] 6
US Billboard 200[35] 2
US Top Tastemaker Albums (Billboard)[94] 1
US Rolling Stone Top 200[95] 2

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Mexico (AMPROFON)[96] Platinum 0

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.

Notes

References

  1. ^ "Manic by Halsey on Apple Music". Apple Music. Retrieved September 13, 2019.
  2. ^ Halsey. "h on Twitter: "It's @JohnMayer ! Haha. He predicted the success of without me before I had faith in myself #manicthealbum" / Twitter". Twitter. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  3. ^ a b c d "Halsey". CMG Credits. Retrieved January 17, 2019.
  4. ^ @halsey (January 10, 2020). "every song has its own identity! I've always said "the album changes its mind as often as I do."" (Tweet). Retrieved February 9, 2020 – via Twitter.
  5. ^ Kreps, Daniel (September 29, 2019). "Halsey Celebrates Birthday With Trip to Aquarium in 'Clementine' Video". Rolling Stone. Retrieved October 19, 2019.
  6. ^ Krol, Charlotte (October 4, 2018). "Listen to Halsey's brand new single, 'Without Me'". NME. Retrieved December 28, 2018.
  7. ^ Madeline Roth (October 9, 2018). "Halsey's 'without me' is her most personal song to date: 'i cried the whole time'". MTV. Retrieved January 18, 2020.
  8. ^ Daw, Stephen (March 26, 2019). "Halsey Promises New Album Is Coming Later This Year: 'I Want it to Be Perfect'". Billboard. Retrieved September 12, 2019.
  9. ^ "Halsey Talks Her Third Album and Turning 25: 'It's a Miracle I Haven't Killed Myself Yet'". Billboard. Retrieved November 29, 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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  11. ^ Newstead, Al (November 27, 2019). "Halsey is releasing new music before Falls Festival". ABC. Retrieved November 29, 2019.
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  35. ^ a b Caulfield, Keith (January 26, 2020). "Eminem Scores Historic 10th No. 1 Album on Billboard 200 Chart With 'Music to Be Murdered By'". Billboard. Retrieved January 27, 2020.
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  60. ^ h [@halsey] (September 29, 2019). "Exactly 25 years ago to this moment I was born. I wanted to celebrate today by sharing a new song called "clementine"🍊and a cute lil video for it that i made with my brother Sevian. Enjoy :)" (Tweet). Retrieved September 30, 2019 – via Twitter.
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  68. ^ ""MANIC" DELUXE 2LP". Halsey Online Store.
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