Femme Fatale (Britney Spears album)
Untitled | |
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Femme Fatale is the seventh studio album recorded by American recording artist Britney Spears. It was made available for digital download on March 25, 2011 through Jive Records. Musically, the singer wanted to make a "fresh-sounding" and "fierce dance album", thus incorporating dance-pop and electropop styles with elements of dubstep, techno, and trance in its sound. Spears began working on the album during the second leg of her tour The Circus Starring Britney Spears (2009), while also contributing to her second compilation album, The Singles Collection (2009). The singer collaborated with various producers on Femme Fatalle, including Max Martin, Dr. Luke, William Orbit, Fraser T Smith, Rodney Jerkins, Bloodshy & Avant, will.i.am and StarGate.
Upon its release, the record received generally favorable reviews from music critics, who complimented its production and dance-pop style, but noted Spears' supposed lack of involvement and heavily processed vocals. She received no songwriting credits on the album aside from the bonus track "Scary", which had not been written by her since her earlier years. Some stated that Spears was no longer the center of the album and found a trade-off to be real personality. Ryan Tedder however, defended her, saying that Frank Sinatra and Garth Brooks were huge artists who didn't write most of their songs. The album debuted atop of the charts in Australia, Brazil, Canada, Mexico, Russia, South Korea and the United States, and peaking inside the top ten in twenty-four countries. In the United States, she earned her sixth number one album.
Four singles were released from the album. It became Spears's first album to have three top 10 singles on the U.S. Billboard Hot 100, with "Hold It Against Me", "Till the World Ends", and "I Wanna Go" peaking at numbers one, three, and seven, respectively. The fourth and final single "Criminal" peaked at number one in Brazil and in the top twenty in five countries. Spears promoted the album with television performances, the Femme Fatale Tour, and collaborations with Kesha, Nicki Minaj, Travis Barker, and Rihanna.
Background and development
In June 2010, during an interview with Rap-Up, Danja commented that he was working with Spears in the pre-production of Femme Fatale.[1] Darkchild, who was also reportedly working with her, said during a Ustream session in August 2010, "Britney fans are gonna be so happy in a few weeks", hinting about the release of new music. However, this was denied by Spears's manager Adam Leber, who stated, "No new music news right now....Wish people wouldn't mislead you guys with info. Not cool! PS- The guys that ARE working on Brit's next album ARE NOT talking about it..."[2] Leber later spoke with Entertainment Weekly, calling the sound of the record "progressive" and "a departure from what you've heard."[3] In November 2010, Dr. Luke announced that he would be the executive producer of the album, along with Max Martin.[4] Spears explained in an interview with Rolling Stone that she had worked with Luke during the production of Blackout (2007), stating that he was "incredible" during that time and that his skills have improved.[5] She also said that Martin was with her since the beginning of her career and that there is "nobody [she] feel[s] more comfortable collaborating with in the studio".[5] On December 2, 2010, the day of her 29th birthday, Spears thanked her fans for the birthday wishes and announced, "I'm almost done with my new album and it will be coming out this March."[6] Following the announcement of the album's title and cover on February 2, 2011, Spears said about Femme Fatale:
I've poured my heart and soul into this album over the last 2 years. I've put everything I have into it. This album is for you, my fans, who have always supported me and have stuck by me every step of the way! I love you all! Sexy and Strong. Dangerous yet mysterious. Cool yet confident! FEMME FATALE.[7]
On February 2, 2011, Spears announced the album's title through her Twitter account, and also posted an image of the album cover.[7] Following the announcement, the title became a trending topic on Twitter, and then went on to become the tenth longest-running trend on the site, as well as the first music related trend to break the top ten.[8] Femme Fatale was released on March 25, 2011.[9]
Recording
In July 2009, Spears announced that she had begun recording new material with longtime collaborator Max Martin.[10] Spears stated her desire to make the album "fresh-sounding [...] for the clubs or something that you play in your car when you're going out at night that gets you excited, but I wanted it to sound different from everything else out right now." Spears also stated that she wanted to make sure Femme Fatale was completely different from her previous studio album Circus (2008).[5] After "Hold It Against Me" was written, originally, Luke and Martin wanted to give the track to Katy Perry, but they later decided that it wasn't the right fit for her. They continued to work on the song with Billboard, and Luke commented that before giving the song to Spears he wanted to make sure it sounded different from his previous recordings.[11] Darkchild stated that while working with him, Spears was very "hands-on" and "had a lot of ideas for [him]."[12] He later commented he had produced two songs for the album, with one of them featuring Travis Barker. Darkchild added that the song "[has] this rock feel which is out of the box, out of my norm, and I think it's out of her norm as well."[13]
Dr. Luke revealed in February 2011 that a final track listing had not yet been chosen.[11] Later that month, Spears worked with will.i.am.[14] Spears later commented that she is a fan of The Black Eyed Peas, and would love to work with will.i.am again the future.[5] She also said that she discovered Sabi through a friend recommendation, and had always wanted to feature a new artist in one of her albums, hence they recorded "(Drop Dead) Beautiful".[5] British producer Fraser T Smith worked with Spears on three tracks and complimented her work ethic, saying that her voice was powerful and that she focused on the music.[15] William Orbit confirmed he had co-written a track for Spears with Klas Åhlund, but it was left off the final track listing.[14] Orbit stated that he was displeased with the decision, and commented, "[T]he Britney thing. Look, I went to a writing camp at Teresa's. Had lovely time. Word got out. Assumptions were made. Dr Luke is exec[utive] prod[ucer] and he locks in locks out whoever he likes. And (do [I] hear [you] ask) where B's at in all this? I surely don't know. [D]id a song [with] Klas Ahlund, who wrote 'Piece of Me'. And is killa. But not on [Femme Fatale] apparently. But a good song is a good song regardless."[16]
Composition
Music writers noted electropop and dance-pop styles on Femme Fatale.[17][18][19][20][21] Music journalist Jody Rosen wrote of the album, "Conceptually it's straightforward: a party record packed with sex and sadness".[22] The album was compared to Spears's previous albums, In the Zone (2003), Blackout and Circus.[23][24] Although Spears was criticized for her lack of involvement from the album's production and writing, she wrote the song "Scary", produced by Fraser T Smith, which is included in the Japanese deluxe edition of the album.[25] The album opens with "Till the World Ends", co-written by Kesha, was described as an uptempo dance-pop and electropop song, with an electro beat and elements of trance and Eurodance.[17][26][27][28] The song opens with sirens and a "sizzling" bassline.[29][30] Critics complimented the songs "anthemic nature" and "chant-like chorus".[31] The second track and lead single "Hold It Against Me" is a dance-pop song which features industrial beats, a dubstep-influenced breakdown and employing elements of grime[32][33] and a final chorus with elements of rave. The lyrics portray the singer seducing someone on the dancefloor, while the chorus revolves around pick-up lines, with Spears singing, "If I said I want your body now, would you hold it against me?"[34] "Hold It Against Me" and Spears were complimented by Rick Florino of Artistdirect for "stepping into new territory and pushing the boundaries of dance-pop once more."[35] The third track "Inside Out" is an electropop song. It features themes of dubstep and R&B, complimented with "earth-shattering synths".[38][39] The song was praised for its intricate production and has been compared to her earlier work on albums In the Zone and Circus, and also to Janet Jackson and Madonna's album Ray of Light (1998) and song Music (2000).[23][40] Spears crescendos "Baby shut your mouth and turn me inside" during the chorus section,[36] and then goes on to "Hit me one more time it’s so amazing” and "You're the only one who's ever drove me crazy", referencing her singles from her debut album, "...Baby One More Time" and "(You Drive Me) Crazy".[37] "I Wanna Go", the fourth track, is a dance-pop and Hi-NRG song, that includes elements of techno and a heavy bassline.[41][42] The song contains a whistled melody. In the chorus, she stutters "I I I wanna go O O / All the way / Taking out my freak tonight".[43] The "builds and breaks" were compared to her album Blackout.[24]
"How I Roll" is the fifth track, produced by Bloodshy, Henrik Jonback & Magnus, where Spears "pirouettes from a gulping in-and-out breath effect", and was described as a "bubbly, playful pop song".[44] Spears' voice is heavily altered, with her voice being put through many distorters, filters, and blenders. The song uses constant rushed handclaps, with elements which were compared to Janet Jackson's "Strawberry Bounce".[45] The sixth and seventh tracks "Drop Dead (Beautiful)" and "Seal It With A Kiss" were commented as "fillers" by Christopher Kostakis of Samesame.com.au.[23] "Big Fat Bass" is Femme Fatale's eighth track, and it was said that it "sticks to dancefloor essentials".[21] The song was further noted as being catchy, but repetitive by Idolator.[46] "Trouble for Me", the ninth song on the album, features a pre-chorus filled with "melting, wheezing synths" likened to a "Wiley grime wobble," segueing into a "Janet Jackson vocal."[47] Spears' voice has been autotuned, but her voice was described as "raw" and the tones and wines as "sexy" and "one of a kind".[45] "Criminal", the last track on the album's standard edition, is a guitar-driven midtempo song, which incorporates a folk-style flute melody.[21][23] Erin Thompson of the Seattle Weekly said the song "takes a breather from aggressive, wall-to-wall synths, driven instead by a steady guitar rhythm and an oddly Asian folky-sounding flute melody."[48] In the verses, Spears sings about being in love with a bad boy and outlaw, in lyrics such as "He is a hustler / He's no good at all / He is a loser, he's a bum, bum, bum, bum" and "He is a bad boy with a tainted heart / And even I know this ain't smart". During the chorus, she pleads to her mother not to worry in lines such as "But mama I'm in love with a criminal" and "Mama please don't cry / I will be alright."[45]
Singles
"Hold It Against Me" was released as the album's lead single on January 11, 2011.[49] The music video for the song premiered on February 17, 2011 on MTV following a two-week teaser campaign and featured Spears as an alien who finds fame on Earth but becomes overwhelmed with her celebrity and breaks down.[50] "Hold It Against Me" became Spears' fourth number one single on the Billboard Hot 100 and second to debut at that position, making Spears the second artist in the chart's history to have multiple singles debut at number one.[51] The song also went to number one in five other countries, including Canada and New Zealand.[52][53]
"Till the World Ends" was released as the second single, making its premiere on Ryan Seacrest's radio show On Air with Ryan Seacrest.[54] The song received positive reviews from critics, complimenting its catchy appeal and anthemic nature.[55] The music video for "Till The World Ends" was released on April 6, 2011 on VEVO and showcased Spears in an underground dance party.[56] A remix featuring Nicki Minaj and Kesha was also released.[57] "Till The World Ends" was commercially successful worldwide, peaking at number three in the United States and also reaching the top ten in more than ten other countries, including Canada and France.[52][58] The song also became Spears' biggest radio hit in the United States at the time, reaching a radio audience of 98 million, the highest weekly audience of her career before "I Wanna Go" was released.[59]
"I Wanna Go" was announced as the third single on May 13, 2011.[60] It was officially released to United States radio on June 14, 2011.[61] The song received positive reviews from critics who praised the song's hook. The music video for "I Wanna Go" was released on June 22, 2011 and featured Spears daydreaming about different scenarios during a press conference.[62] After the video premiere, the song reached number twenty-nine on the Billboard Hot 100.[63] After "I Wanna Go" reached number seven in the United States, Femme Fatale became Spears's first album to produce three top ten hits on the chart.[64]
"Criminal" was announced as the album's fourth and final single following the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards on August 28, 2011.[65] Earlier that month, a poll on Spears' official Facebook page appeared, asking the fans to vote for the fourth official single from Femme Fatale, the choices being "Criminal", "(Drop Dead) Beautiful", and "Inside Out".[66] "Criminal" was later released on September 30, 2011 as the final single from the album.[67] The accompanying music video was filmed in Stoke Newington, a district of London, England.[68] It peaked at number fifty-five in the United States.[69]
Promotion
The first set of promotion included an interview from Ryan Seacrest, then promotion for the album began on March 25, 2011 in a performance that included "Hold It Against Me", "Till the World Ends" and "Big Fat Bass". The performance was filmed at Rain Nightclub inside the Palms Casino Resort and was included in a MTV special titled "I Am the Femme Fatale", which aired on April 3, 2011.[70] Spears manager Larry Rudolph explained the choice of the location for the performances in an interview with MTV, saying, "we chose the Palms because the Palms is where Britney has so much history. We performed here with the Britney album, we did a similar thing. We're doing this eight years later now and we're doing it for the fans." Rudolph also explained that the singer's main goal was to entertain her fans in the Femme Fatale era, and added, "I want them to know — when the fans watch this — I want them to know that Britney is back and better than ever, not that she's ever gone anywhere. But she's back and she's better than ever."[71] The original airing of the special in the United States was viewed by 0.665 million viewers and received a Nielsen rating of 0.3/1 in the key adults 18–49 demographic.[72]
On March 27, Spears performed the same set of songs in the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium to a crowd of 5,000 people for a special episode of Good Morning America that aired on March 29.[73] The singer also performed the same three-song set and participated in two skits on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on March 29,[74] and made a special appearance at the 2011 Kids' Choice Awards.[75] She was also scheduled to make several appearances on The Ellen DeGeneres Show on the week of the album's release.[76] In April 2011, Spears appeared in a remix to the song "S&M" by Rihanna, after Rihanna asked her fans via Twitter who they wanted her to collaborate with.[77] The song reached number one in the US in mid-April 2011, giving Spears her fifth number one on the chart.[78] She also served as a guest host at the 2011 Wango Tango concert series alongside Ryan Seacrest on May 14, 2011.[79] Spears made a brief appearance at the 2011 Billboard Music Awards, performing the "S&M" remix with Rihanna and a short version of "Till The World Ends" alongside Femme Fatale tourmate Nicki Minaj.[80] On August 3, 2011, ABC Family announced that "(Drop Dead) Beautiful" would be available for free download on their website, until the premiere of the Teen Spirit series on August 5, 2011 more promotion for the album stated in the uk on her European leg of the femme fatale tour Britney promoted the album with dozens of interviews and radio pressings as well as a twister commercial which was finished after the femme fatale tour.[81] "Trouble for Me" was also featured on the main page of BMG's website.[82] Spears also appeared at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards, where she was awarded the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award.[83] "Gasoline" was used in a November 2012 commercial for Spears's perfume "Fantasy Twist".[84]
Femme Fatale Tour
On June 16, 2011, Spears embarked on her sixth concert tour to further promote Femme Fatale. It was announced on March 29, 2011 and so far includes 39 dates in North America and 26 dates in Europe.[85] In an interview on Ryan Seacrest's radio show on March 4, 2011, Spears stated she would tour the United States in the "early summer" in support of Femme Fatale.[86] On March 29, 2011, following her performances on Good Morning America, she announced a co-headlining tour with Enrique Iglesias, starting in June 2011. Hours after the announcement, it was reported by Billboard that Iglesias had pulled out of the tour. Ray Wedell of Billboard speculated that the reason may have been that Spears was deemed by news outlets as the headliner, while Iglesias was considered the opening act.[87] The first twenty-six North American dates were also announced on March 29, 2011.[88] The opening acts were announced on April 12, 2011. Spears stated, "This is the Femme Fatale tour and I'm thrilled to have Nicki Minaj, Jessie and the Toy Boys, and Nervo join me and get everyone on the dance floor. Can't wait to take the Femme Fatales on the road." Tickets for select markets go on sale beginning April 30 at Ticketmaster and Live Nation's websites.[89] In March 2011, Spears's manager Larry Rudolph told MTV News that the tour would have a "post-apocalyptic vibe", while commenting that "Till the World Ends" keeps becoming a theme for us." He also confirmed Jamie King as the tour director.[90] The tour opened to positive reviews, with some calling it her best tour in her entire career.[91]
Critical reception
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 67/100<[92] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [93] |
Robert Christgau | B+[94] |
Entertainment Weekly | B+[20] |
The Guardian | [95] |
The Independent | [21] |
NME | 7/10[96] |
The Observer | [42] |
Rolling Stone | [22] |
Slant Magazine | [97] |
Spin | 7/10[98] |
The album received generally positive reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, Femme Fatale holds an average score of 67 out of 100 (indicating "generally favorable reviews") based on 25 reviews from mainstream music critics.[18] Jody Rosen of Rolling Stone commented that it "may be Britney's best album; certainly it's her strangest".[22] Allmusic editor Stephen Thomas Erlewine viewed that Spears' presence on the album is overshadowed by its "high-class" production, calling the album "essentially a cleaner, classier remake of the gaudily dark Blackout [...] a producer’s paradise".[93] Robert Everett-Green of The Globe and Mail gave the album three-and-a-half out of four stars and complimented its "grainy, glistening electronic sound", calling it "one of the major guilty pleasures in pop this year".[99] Kitty Empire of The Observer commented that Spears "has turned out the “fierce dance record” she promised".[42] Ailbhe Malone of NME viewed it as her "best work" and wrote that it "brims with the laidback confidence of someone who knows she's back on top."[96]
MSN Music's Robert Christgau gave the album a B+ rating,[94] indicating "remarkable one way or another, yet also flirts with the humdrum or the half-assed".[100] Slant Magazine's Sal Cinquemani commented that Spears's lack of involvement makes "the success of a Britney song rest almost entirely on the quality of other people's songwriting and production, and almost every track on Femme Fatale succeeds or fails on that basis".[97] Los Angeles Times writer Carl Wilson felt that the album "finds unity of subject, style and sound by imagining scenarios in which vanishing into anonymity can be comfort and liberation".[101] Tom Gockelen-Kozlowski of The Daily Telegraph felt that, "despite her weak voice and empty lyrics, [Spears] has placed herself at the avant-garde of pop with this masterful mixture of über-cool dubstep and sugary pop".[102] The A.V. Club's Genevieve Koski wrote that Spears "settles into [the production], game for whatever and confident in the hands of trusted professionals who know how to best utilize her".[103]
In a mixed review, Andy Gill of The Independent criticized its "single-minded dedication to dancefloor utility" and observed "only the tiniest of rhythmic variants or differences in electronic tones distinguishing one producer's work from another's".[21] Jon Caramanica of The New York Times commented that "much of the music on this album feels flat and redundant, no more invigorating than the average European dance-pop album of five years ago".[104] The Guardian's Alexis Petridis wrote that Spears' "voice is as anonymous as ever, a state of affairs amplified by the lavishing of Auto-Tune".[95] Evan Sawdey of PopMatters wrote that "Spears' worldview is completely self-contained" and described Femme Fatale as "just a big dumb club album".[105] Rich Juzwiak of The Village Voice wrote that her "voice doesn't add much to the conversation", writing that her lack of presence is "problematic for an album whose subject matter is hedonism and how being hot facilitates it".[106]
Music critics, despite giving favorable reviews, noted Spears' apparent lack of input on Femme Fatale.[93] Singer-songwriter Ryan Tedder defended her, stating that "[Frank] Sinatra didn't write a song, Garth Brooks barely wrote anything, George Strait has had I think 51 No. 1's and he has yet to write a song. Rascal Flatts are one of the biggest country acts in the world, and all of their hits are written by other people."[107] Spears responded to further criticism of her performing abilities,[108] "I don’t really have anything to prove at this point. I just do it for fun and see what happens."[109]
Executive producer Dr. Luke stated that "[I feel like] Britney kind of has her own genre: If you look at songs like "Toxic" and "Piece of Me" and "Oops!... I Did It Again", they all were sort of influential and led the way [...] She wanted to keep on with that and do stuff that was 'forward-thinking', So we put some dubstep stuff in there, in bridges; snuck it in different places."[110] Jocelyn Vena of MTV noted that "for the first time in a while, she seemed comfortable being the pop megastar that she is."[111] Spin named Femme Fatale the 50th best album of 2011[112] and also placed it at number 3 in their "20 Best Pop Albums of 2011" list.[113] Digital Spy ranked the album at number 11 at their year ends list.[114] "Till the World Ends" was named the third best song of 2011 by Rolling Stone[115] and the third best single of 2011 by Billboard, who described it as "Britney's most immediate single since 'Toxic'."[116] Sam Lansky of PopCrush considered "Till the World Ends" the best pop song of 2011.[117] Digital Spy also considered the track as the best song of 2011, naming it "Britney's best track since 'Toxic'" and "her most underrated hit."[118]
Accolades
Femme Fatale won its first awards on Billboard's 2011 Mid-Year Music Awards, where she was nominated in five categories, First-Half MVP, Favorite Hot 100 No. 1 Song ("Hold It Against Me"), Favorite Billboard 200 No. 1 Album (Femme Fatale), Best Music Video ("I Wanna Go"), and Best Tour (Femme Fatale Tour), which she all won.[119] There was also a list of Billboard's Mid-Year sales of 2011, on which Spears was named twice. Femme Fatale reached number 12 with 590,000 sold units, and her second single "Till the World Ends" number 18 with 1,989,000 million sold units.[119] The singer was also awarded Best Pop Video for "Till The World Ends", as well the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard Award and a special tribute for her contributions to music videos and pop culture during the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards.[120] Spears considered the tribute "an honor", and continued, "It was really crazy. I had no idea what to expect. The kids were amazing and so entertaining, and it was a really fun night. It was really cool. I was like, 'Wow, that's really sweet!'"[121]
Despite receiving mostly positive comments from critics, Femme Fatale did not receive any nomination on the 2012 Grammy Awards. John Mitchell of MTV criticized the award show and stated that "Till the World Ends" should have won a nomination on the Best Dance Recording category.[122] Robbie Daw of Idolator also stated that the singer should have been nominated, commenting, "she had a #1 album that yielded a trio of hits. So what gives?"[123] Ed Christman of Billboard noted that Femme Fatale was "overlooked" by the Grammy voters.[124] James Montgomery also of MTV, however, noted that the singer has "never been considered a Grammy artist, and has won just once during her entire career."[125]
Commercial performance
Femme Fatale debuted at number one on the Billboard 200, with first-week sales of 276,000 copies.[126] This gave Spears her sixth debut at the top of the charts and leaves her in a three way tie for third most number one albums for a female artist, tied with Mariah Carey and Janet Jackson.[126] In its second week, the album fell to number two, with sales plummeting 73 percent to 75,000, giving it a two-week total of 351,000 sold in the United States.[127] The album spent five consecutive weeks in the Billboard 200 top ten.[128] The album has been certified platinum in April 2011,[129] and has sold 788,000 copies in the country as of March 24, 2015.[130] In Mexico, the album debuted at number one upon its release, spending three weeks inside the top ten before falling to number thirteen.[131] AMPROFON has certified the album Gold and according to Sony Music México the album has gone on to sell over 40,000 copies in the country.[132]
The album debuted at number eight on the UK Albums Chart, selling 31,650 copies in its first week,[133][134] becoming her lowest-charting studio album in the United Kingdom since In the Zone, which peaked at number thirteen in December 2003. In Germany, the album debuted at number ten making it her seventh top-ten studio album in a row, and her eighth top-ten album with the inclusion of the compilation album Greatest Hits: My Prerogative (2004), which peaked at number four.[135][136] Femme Fatale debuted at number eight in Denmark, selling 1,009 copies in its first week.[137] On April 4, 2011 Femme Fatale debuted at number one in Australia, making it Spears' first number one album in the country. It was also certified gold in during its debut week for shipments over 35,000 copies.[138]
Track listing
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Till the World Ends" |
| 3:57 | |
2. | "Hold It Against Me" |
|
| 3:48 |
3. | "Inside Out" |
|
| 3:38 |
4. | "I Wanna Go" |
|
| 3:30 |
5. | "How I Roll" | 3:36 | ||
6. | "(Drop Dead) Beautiful" (featuring Sabi) |
|
| 3:36 |
7. | "Seal It with a Kiss" |
| 3:26 | |
8. | "Big Fat Bass" (featuring will.i.am) | William Adams | will.i.am | 4:44 |
9. | "Trouble for Me" | Smith | 3:19 | |
10. | "Trip to Your Heart" |
|
| 3:33 |
11. | "Gasoline" |
|
| 3:08 |
12. | "Criminal" |
|
| 3:45 |
Total length: | 44:00 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
13. | "Up n' Down" |
|
| 3:42 |
14. | "He About to Lose Me" | Jerkins | 3:48 | |
15. | "Selfish" | 3:43 | ||
16. | "Don't Keep Me Waiting" |
| Jerkins | 3:21 |
Total length: | 58:34 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
17. | "Scary" |
| Smith | 3:39 |
Total length: | 62:13 |
- Notes
Personnel
Credits for Femme Fatale adapted from AllMusic.[141]
- Ammo – instrumentation, producer, programming, background vocals
- Beatriz Artola – engineer
- Stacey Barnett – background vocals
- Billboard – instrumentation, producer, programming
- Benny Blanco – instrumentation, producer, programming, background vocals
- Sophia Black – background vocals
- Christian Karlsson – instrumentation, producer, programming, vocal producer
- Heather Bright – background vocals
- Tom Coyne – mastering
- Ester Dean – background vocals
- Megan Dennis – production coordination
- DJ Ammo – drum programming, synthesizer
- Dr. Luke – executive producer, instrumentation, producer, programming, background vocals
- Dream Machine – instrumentation, producer, programming
- Dylan Dresdow – mixing
- Eric Eylands – assistant engineer
- Ashton Foster – background vocals
- Livvi Franc – background vocals
- Fraser T Smith – drum programming, keyboards, producer
- Clint Gibbs – production coordination
- Aniela Gottwald – assistant
- Tatiana Gottwald – assistant
- Venza Gottwald – assistant
- John Hanes – engineer, mixing
- Jeri Heiden – art direction
- Jacob Kasher Hindlin
- Sam Holland – engineer, background vocals
- J-MIKE – instrumentation, producer, programming, background vocals
- Cri$tyle Johnson – background vocals
- Henrik Jonback – instrumentation, producer, programming, vocal producer
- Claude Kelly – background vocals
- Padraic Kerin – engineer
- Alexander Kronlund – instrumentation, programming
- Adam Leber – A&R
- Jeremy "J Boogs" Levin – assistant
- Magnus – instrumentation, producer, programming, vocal producer
- Myah Marie – background vocals
- Max Martin – engineer, executive producer, instrumentation, keyboards, producer, programming, background vocals
- Bonnie McKee – background vocals, guest vocals
- Nicole Morier – background vocals
- Jackie Murphy – creative director
- Rob Murray – assistant
- Chris "Tek" O'Ryan – engineer
- Chau Phan – background vocals
- Irene Richter – production coordination
- Tim Roberts – assistant engineer, mixing assistant
- Patrizia Rogosch – background vocals
- Larry Rudolph – A&R
- Britney Spears – Primary artist, lead vocals, concept, background vocals
- Shellback – bass, engineer, guitar, keyboards, producer
- Nick Steinhardt – art direction, design
- Ryan Supple – photo production
- Peter Thea – A&R
- Dave Thomas – stylist
- will.i.am – drum programming, engineer, piano, producer, synthesizer, guest vocals
- Emily Wright – engineer, vocal producer
- Randee St. Nicholas – photography
- Serban Ghenea – mixing
Charts
Weekly charts
|
Year-end charts
|
Certifications
Region | Certification | Certified units/sales |
---|---|---|
Australia (ARIA)[180] | Gold | 35,000^ |
Brazil (IFPI)[129] | Gold | 40,000[181] |
Canada (Music Canada)[182] | Platinum | 80,000^ |
Czech Republic (IFPI)[129] | Gold | 2,500[181] |
France (SNEP)[183] | Gold | 50,000* |
Ireland (IRMA)[184] | Gold | 7,500^ |
Mexico (AMPROFON)[185] | Gold | 30,000^ |
Portugal (AFP)[186] | Platinum | 15,000^ |
Singapore (IFPI)[129] | Gold | 5,000[181] |
South Korea (IFPI)[129] | Gold | 5,000[181] |
Sweden (GLF)[187] | Gold | 20,000‡ |
United Kingdom (BPI)[188] | Gold | 100,000‡ |
United States (RIAA)[189] | Platinum | 806,000^ |
* Sales figures based on certification alone. |
Release history
Region | Date | Format | Label | Edition(s) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Netherlands[190] | March 25, 2011 | CD | Sony Music | Deluxe |
Denmark | Standard,[191] Deluxe (with fragrance)[192] | |||
Norway[193] | Deluxe | |||
Australia[9] | ||||
Germany | Standard,[194] Deluxe[195] | |||
Hong Kong[196] | March 28, 2011 | Deluxe | ||
Poland[197] | Eco, Standard, Deluxe | |||
South Africa[198] | Deluxe | |||
United States[139][199] | March 29, 2011 | CD, digital download | JIVE Records | Standard, Deluxe |
Taiwan[200] | CD | Sony Music | Deluxe | |
Japan[140] | April 6, 2011 | Sony Music Japan | Japan edition | |
United Kingdom[201] | June 17, 2011 | RCA Records | Deluxe (Jewel case) |
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{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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- ^ "Femme Fatale – Spears Britney – Musik". CDON Group. Retrieved March 6, 2011.
- ^ "Femme Fatale – Deluxe Edition (with fragrance insert) – Spears Britney – Musik". CDON Group. Retrieved March 26, 2011.
- ^ "730.no.: Femme Fatale: Britney Spears: Music". 730.no. Retrieved February 9, 2011.
- ^ "Amazon.de: Femme Fatale: Britney Spears: Music". Amazon.com. Retrieved March 24, 2011.
- ^ "Amazon.de: Femme Fatale (Deluxe Edition): Britney Spears: Music". Amazon.com. Retrieved March 24, 2011.
- ^ "Femme Fatale – Britney Spears – Sony Music" (in Chinese). Sony Music Hong Kong. Archived from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved April 2, 2011.
- ^ "Femme Fatale (Eco Style) (CD)". Empik. Retrieved March 12, 2011.
- ^ "Britney Spears – Femme Fatale (Deluxe Edition CD)". Take2.co.za. Retrieved March 24, 2011.
- ^ "Pre-order 'Femme Fatale' Premium Fan Edition". JIVE Records. February 4, 2011. Archived from the original on July 13, 2011. Retrieved February 5, 2011.
- ^ "Britney Spears: Femme Fatale (Deluxe Edition)". Sony Music Taiwan. Archived from the original on May 27, 2011. Retrieved February 27, 2011.
- ^ "Britney Spears: Femme Fatale (Deluxe Edition) (Jewel Case) (CD)". Retrieved June 6, 2015.
External links
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- 2011 albums
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