Good Faith (Madeon album)
Good Faith | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 15 November 2019 | |||
Recorded | 2016–2019 in Nantes, New York City, Ålesund, and Los Angeles | |||
Genre | French house[1] | |||
Length | 35:07 | |||
Label | Columbia | |||
Producer | Hugo Pierre Leclercq | |||
Madeon chronology | ||||
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Singles from Good Faith | ||||
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Good Faith is the second studio album by French DJ and record producer Madeon. It was released on 15 November 2019 through Columbia Records. The album features contributions and vocals from Callie Day, Spoonface, Audra Mae, James the Human, Brasstracks, and the West Los Angeles Children's Choir.
The album was promoted by three singles: "All My Friends", "Dream Dream Dream", and "Be Fine".
Background
By mid 2016, Leclercq had launched himself into mainstream success via his viral mashup "Pop Culture", toured with Lady Gaga, produced singles for Gaga, Coldplay, Ellie Goulding, and Two Door Cinema Club,[2] and released his debut album Adventure to positive critical reception. He then released a joint single with friend and fellow electronic producer Porter Robinson, "Shelter", which released to positive appraisal and appeared on music charts worldwide.
After touring "Shelter", Leclercq took a break from touring in late 2017 and 2018 to work on his second album. He recorded and wrote the album while traveling in Europe and across North America.[3]
Leclercq released his single "All My Friends" in May 2019, three years since "Shelter". He then subsequently released two more singles in July and October and announced the release date for his album as 15 November 2019.[4]
Inspiration
In early 2017, Leclercq, coming off of the Shelter Live Tour with friend Porter Robinson, felt that the sincere style of lyric writing he used for “Shelter” could be incorporated into his Madeon music, and not simply have his music production and songs be a vehicle for other people's stories.[5]
During Good Faith’s production, Leclercq listened to a plethora of hip hop music, as well as artists like Frank Ocean, Tyler, the Creator, Kraftwerk, and Pink Floyd, and states that their music gave inspiration for some of the production styles of the album. He also frequently cites Daft Punk and The Beatles as constant heavy influences on his songwriting and production, even before he began writing Good Faith.[6]
Recording
Recording history
As Leclercq finished touring his Adventure album on the Pixel Empire Tour in early 2016, he stayed in a New York studio for three days to conceive concepts for a second studio album. He has stated that "Porter had heard some of the music I was writing and really liked it, and it kind of inspired us to make 'Shelter'".[7] During production of "Shelter" and the Shelter Live Tour, Leclercq stated that he always had the intention to eventually produce Good Faith.[8]
For his whole life, Leclercq had produced his music, including the entirety of Adventure and the beginnings of Good Faith, mainly out of his studio in his parents basement in Nantes. Leclercq also spent some time in Ålesund, Norway producing some of the album at Ocean Sound Recordings. While touring in 2018, he was playing a show in Los Angeles and decided to move to Hollywood Hills from France, relocating his studio as well.[8][9]
Leclercq has sole production, mixing, and mastering credit for all songs on the album. He states that the writing and production of the album was mostly a solitary effort, as only two of the songs have a co-writer. Leclercq would "sometimes [try] to grab something" from a collaborator, like an instrumental performance or a vocal recording.[3]
After releasing two of the leading singles off of Good Faith, on 14 October 2019 Leclercq sent out an emotional letter to fans on his e-mail list and social media, opening up about his depression after performing a debut Good Faith Live show at Lollapalooza. He stated that he had put production and release of the album on hold to give himself time to recuperate and "be healthy".[10]
Composition
"I definitely tried to outgrow some of my previous production sensibility, which was, you know, informed by dance music... I keep everything that I loved about that and also embrace all my other influences."
Leclercq selected the album title "Good Faith" several years prior to its release. He states that he enjoys the both the "spiritual" and "candid, legal" interpretations of the title, and that he found both words to be profound and evocative of the idea behind the album.[3]
Leclercq has stated although that he meant for the choirs and soul singers on the album to sound like they were taken from other songs, the album contains no use of sampling. Leclercq instead opted to record live choirs and solo gospel singers.[6] In addition, he also recorded live drums and numerous live instruments. When recording his first and previous studio album Adventure, Leclercq provided vocals for three tracks. He has also spoken about how writing and performing the vocals for his and Porter Robinson's single "Shelter" caused him to want to stray away from having traditional features to lean more towards performing the vocals himself citing a wish for the album to feel like "more of an embodied artist project".[6] Leclercq provides vocals for every song on Good Faith, aside from "Heavy With Hoping".
Good Faith takes inspiration from R&B, hip hop, gospel, and funk music, while also being influenced by Leclercq's background producing nu-disco, French house, and EDM.[1] He states he listened to artists that he adjectively describes as "so Good Faith": Tame Impala, Jamie xx, The Zombies, Anderson .Paak, Chance the Rapper, and The Weeknd.[6]
Technical aspects
Leclercq is adept in various vocal processing techniques. He uses them throughout his past releases as well as in Good Faith. In many of the album's tracks, Leclercq most notably uses vocal chopping on R&B style vocals in "Dream Dream Dream", "Nirvana" and "Be Fine", as well as chopping his own vocals in "Miracle".[11] Another technique carried over into the album from previous releases like "Shelter", "Beings", and "Zephyr", is Leclercq's liberal use of "formant shifting". This technique shifts peaks in a frequency spectrum to adjust the "openness" of the human voice. This causes Leclercq's voice to sound significantly more or less deep(e.g. in "No Fear No More", "Be Fine") while still singing the same pitch. Leclercq also processes his voice using a pitch correction software to a more distinct degree in Good Faith than in "Shelter" or any tracks off of Adventure.[2]
He also employs classic house music techniques like kick drum side-chaining, which is heavily used in "Mania". He also uses fast arpeggiation with little attack in most of the tracks to add "flutter". He utilizes classic nu-disco and French house style bass-lines, clap patterns, and synth sounds, reminiscent of Leclercq's signature sound from previous releases as exemplified in "No Fear No More" and "All My Friends".[12]
Themes
I wanted my "joy" album. Through the process of making it, initially, it can be a fairly superficial pursuit — just making stuff about "joy." As you start to question where it comes from, you find the depth, the substance. It became more meaningful to me because it became more about earning my joy rather than just describing it. Making the album these past three years has been difficult with some really low points. Re-earning my joy through introspection has been a real journey.
Good Faith consists of ten tracks. This is significantly less than his previous album, but Leclercq defends this by saying that he thinks of the ten tracks and surrounding production more like an era than an album. He says that, even after the album's release, "there'll be more Good Faith." [3]
Leclercq says that the theme of the album is about a person's love, questioning, and relationship to reality, and the validity of emotion with the benefit of positive hindsight.[5] He also has said that his mood, mental health and questioning his own joy and enthusiasm have been heavy themes that he wanted to impress into the album.
Similarly to what he did with Adventure, Leclercq makes a point to hide messages, objects, and code into his album designs and songs, in order to make something that's "worth being a fan of".[9] This was exemplified best during the release of the limited edition "All My Friends" vinyl record at specific record stores in the cities in which he had spent time producing Good Faith. This was meant as a scavenger hunt for fans, as he did not specify where the record stores were, and only had eight records pressed, two per store.[13]
Songs
The second track on the album, "All My Friends", was released as the first single in May 2019. Leclercq states that, of the whole album, "All My Friends" is "the most directly and structurally pop song. It's a fun statement to start a campaign with the most confidently pop song." Leclercq considers the track to be an homage to all of his favorite pop music. He compares the release of this track as the first single of Good Faith to fellow French DJ/producers Daft Punk's release of "One More Time", the first single off of 2001's Discovery.[8]
Leclercq has said that some tracks, like "Dream Dream Dream" were completed early on during production of the album, but held off on releasing them in order to connect all aspects of the album thematically and under one vision.[14]
Art
Leclercq began planning and designing art for Good Faith as early as late 2015.[9] The final artwork is a filtered photo of Leclercq. The filter is a photo negative that has its highlights color shifted to green, mid-tones shifted blue, and shadows shifted red. This filter is also used on many of the promotional art, music videos, and single cover art for Good Faith, sometimes varying the colors and shifting between a photo negative and photo positive.[citation needed]
Promotion
Music videos
After the release of each single, Leclercq uploaded both an official audio video and an official music video to his YouTube channel.
Singles
On 29 May 2019 Leclercq released a preview of "All My Friends", his first single since "Shelter". This preview was released through a new website, goodfaith.world,[15] which contained a video[16] that played the song, along with locations of record stores in four cities: Los Angeles, New York, Ålesund, and Nantes. Each record store was issued two copies of the new single on clear 7" vinyl. On 30 May 2019, the full official audio was released on YouTube.[17]
Good Faith Radio
On 10 July 2019, Leclercq premiered the first episode of Good Faith Radio (Beats 1 Radio on Apple Music),[18] where he debuted Good Faith's his second single, "Dream Dream Dream", and played tracks by other artists, including music sent by his fans accompanied by fan-made art. He described the radio show as "...a space I want us to share, I want to introduce you to my favorite things and showcase some of the amazing music and art you create."[19] Along with the radio premiere, "Dream Dream Dream" was released on music streaming platforms and a visualizer video was released on YouTube.[20]
Good Faith Live Tour
In mid-2019, Leclercq announced that his live show, dubbed Good Faith Live, would debut at Lollapalooza 2019, along with new music.[21] He stated in an interview that he had been writing the album and creating the Good Faith Live show simultaneously, and he wanted the debut of his new show to have an appropriately sized production.[5][22] It was later revealed his supporting lineup consisted of ford., LP Giobbi, Devault, Ilo Ilo, Giraffage, Flamingosis, and Instupendo.[23]
The show consists of Leclercq performing alone on stage triggering samples, playing keys, drums, and singing, while accompanied by themed visuals loosely inspired by the types used in the Shelter Live Tour.[8] He announced that the first show at Lollapalooza would be followed by shows in London, Amsterdam, and Paris. A longer North American leg began in October 2019 in Vancouver and will end on 14 December in Austin, Texas, a total of 31 shows.[24] This will be followed by an Australian tour as part of FOMO Festival in January 2020.
Reception
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Album of the Year | 65/100[25] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
A review of the album from Magnetic Magazine praised the album, stating “...this new album is a step in a new direction that feels more organic and authentic to Madeon. Good Faith is his best work yet and what a way to cap off a decade that has seen him grow from a teenager working out of his parents' home in Nantes to a festival headliner and universally loved dance act.” [26] An article from London newspaper Evening Standard negatively assessed his use of pitch correction, stating he is "using his voice more like a synth". The article also opined that the album lacked originality and that Leclercq sounded like a producer that was "still finding his own voice".[2] On review aggregator website Album of the Year, the album holds a 65% based on 2 critic scores.[25]
Track listing
All tracks are written by Hugo Pierre Leclercq. "Hold Me Just Because" is co-written by James Alan Ghaleb and "Heavy with Hoping" is co-written by Audra Mae
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Dream Dream Dream" | 3:54 |
2. | "All My Friends" | 3:24 |
3. | "Be Fine" | 3:28 |
4. | "Nirvana" | 2:32 |
5. | "Mania" | 2:32 |
6. | "Miracle" | 4:10 |
7. | "No Fear No More" | 3:15 |
8. | "Hold Me Just Because" | 3:06 |
9. | "Heavy with Hoping" | 4:01 |
10. | "Borealis" | 4:45 |
Total length: | 35:07 |
Notes
- All songs produced, arranged, mixed and feature vocals by Hugo Leclercq.
- "All My Friends" features additional vocals from Jackson Dean, bass guitar from Jake Bowman, guitar and additional programming from Alex Al, Rob Harris, Hal Ritson, and Richard Adlam, engineering by Tom Norris, and additional piano from Al.
- "Be Fine", "Mania" and "Miracle" feature vocals from Callie Day.
- "Nirvana" features vocals from Elroy "Spoonface" Powell and additional programming from Richard Adlam and Hal Ritson.
- "No Fear No More" features vocals from the West Los Angeles Children's Choir.
- "Hold Me Just Because" features contributions from James the Human and Brasstracks.
- "Heavy with Hoping" features vocals from Audra Mae.
- "Borealis" features steel guitar by B. J. Cole.
Charts
Chart (2019) | Peak position |
---|---|
US Billboard 200[27] | 82 |
US Top Dance/Electronic Albums (Billboard)[28] | 1 |
US Top Album Sales (Billboard)[29] | 15 |
US Digital Albums (Billboard)[30] | 7 |
Notes
- Five tracks from Good Faith charted on the Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs:[31]
- "All My Friends" peaked at number 16.
- "Be Fine" peaked at 30.
- "No Fear No More" peaked at 36.
- "Dream Dream Dream" peaked at 37.
- "Miracle" peaked at 38.
Release history
Region | Date | Format(s) | Label |
---|---|---|---|
Various | 15 November 2019 | Columbia |
References
- ^ a b Meadow, Matthew (15 November 2019). "Madeon's Highly Anticipated New Album Is Finally Here & It's Basically Perfect". Your EDM. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b c "Madeon is a prodigious producer still finding his voice on Good Faith". Evening Standard. 15 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Madeon Breaks Down What Inspired His New Album 'Good Faith'". Complex. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ Mullins, About the Author / Ellie (30 October 2019). "Madeon announces 'Good Faith' album release date". We Rave You. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
{{cite web}}
:|first=
has generic name (help) - ^ a b c "Madeon On Upcoming Album 'Good Faith' & Debuting New Live Show at Lollapalooza 2019 | On The Road". Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b c d "Madeon Keeps the Faith". Paper. 1 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ Cline, Matty (31 May 2019). "Madeon Talks About the Good Faith Era in Radio Interview". EDMTunes. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b c d "'What I Made Before Was Fiction. Now, I'm Designing A Life': Madeon Discusses His New Album & Next Act". Billboard. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b c "Madeon: Splendid Isolation". DJ Mag. 19 August 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon opens up about depression and announces new single, 'Be Fine'". Dancing Astronaut. 15 October 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Listen: Madeon Releases Angelic Album 'Good Faith'". CULTR. 15 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon finally drops his 10-track album". The Groove Cartel. 14 November 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ Meadow, Matthew (29 May 2019). "Madeon Releases New Single Exclusively On Vinyl Early In Four Select Cities [VIDEO]". Your EDM. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon details his Good Faith Live premiere at Lollapalooza, plans for sophomore LP, and the genesis of 'Pop Culture' [Interview]". Dancing Astronaut. 5 September 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ goodfaith.world
- ^ Madeon (29 May 2019). "FOUR CITIES". Retrieved 29 May 2019.
- ^ Madeon (30 May 2019). "Madeon - All My Friends (Official Audio)". Retrieved 30 May 2019.
- ^ "Madeon debuts Good Faith Radio show midweek on Beats 1 Radio". We Rave You. 14 July 2019. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
- ^ @madeon (8 July 2019). "It's a space I want us to share, I want to introduce you to my favorite things and showcase some of the amazing music and art you create. The first episode airs THIS Wednesday at 11am PT. I'll be playing my new single Dream Dream Dream" (Tweet). Retrieved 10 July 2019 – via Twitter.
- ^ MadeonVEVO (10 July 2019). "Madeon - Dream Dream Dream (Visualizer)". Retrieved 10 July 2019 – via YouTube.
- ^ https://twitter.com/madeon/status/1108431988254400512
- ^ @madeon. "been waiting for this moment for years i will truly never forget this. Good Faith Live premiere at Lollapalooza. pic.twitter.com/x2rJUAuqfP" (Tweet). Retrieved 26 September 2019 – via Twitter. {{Cite tweet}}: Invalid |number= (help)
- ^ "Flamingosis on Instagram: "Excited to announce that I will be hitting the road with @madeon supporting him in his Good Faith tour from 10/30 - 11/3 . See you soon !…"". Instagram. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon releases dates for 'Good Faith' Live Tour". We Rave You. 25 June 2019. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ a b "Madeon - Good Faith". Retrieved 6 December 2019.
- ^ Middleton, Ryan. "Review: Madeon Is At His Best With New Album 'Good Faith'". Magnetic Magazine. Retrieved 15 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon Chart History (Billboard 200)". Billboard. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon Chart History (Top Dance/Electronic Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon Chart History (Top Album Sales)". Billboard. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon Chart History (Digital Albums)".[dead link ] Billboard. Retrieved 26 November 2019.
- ^ "Madeon Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved 26 November 2019.