Special Lizzo

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
2021

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
15.07.2022

Label: Nice Life/Atlantic

Genre: Pop

Subgenre: Pop Rock

Interpret: Lizzo

Das Album enthält Albumcover

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  • 1The Sign02:45
  • 2About Damn Time03:11
  • 3Grrrls02:01
  • 42 Be Loved (Am I Ready)03:07
  • 5I Love You Bitch02:28
  • 6Special02:54
  • 7Break Up Twice02:56
  • 8Everybody’s Gay03:35
  • 9Naked03:00
  • 10Birthday Girl03:07
  • 11If You Love Me03:11
  • 12Coldplay02:55
  • Total Runtime35:10

Info zu Special

Grammy Award-winning and multi-platinum superstar Lizzo returns with Special, her massively anticipated second full-length offering which includes the help of collaborators Ricky Reed, Max Martin, and Mark Ronson.

When you love yourself, anything becomes possible. Channeling boundless self-confidence through a downright earth-quaking voice, colorful persona, and undeniable star power, Lizzo struts into the spotlight and steps up with a whole lot of sass, spirit, and soul. Embracing her vocal range like never before and celebrating herself to the fullest, she speaks her mind, censors nothing, and delivers an enviable level of honesty, pure passion, and fresh fire. Previewed by the anthemic hit “About Damn Time,” Special marks her biggest, boldest, and brightest revolution thus far.

"So here we are... You are finally able to listen to this album I've working on it for 3 years and I know it's been a long time and it's about damn time I put it out. But you have to know that I took my time for me but I also took my time for you. I wrote almost 170 songs for this album to find this perfect 12 songs to bring to you because I felt like this was not only I needed to hear but you needed to hear and the whole world needs to hear. These are songs about love, whether self-love, love your family, love your friends, or love for significant other. I rеally believe that lovе for one self and for others is what this world needs to be a better place. If you can take just the time to give a little love to yourself every single day, treat yourself with respect, treat yourself the way you deserve to be treated and then treat somebody else the same love or respect that expands, that grows and that can save a life. It saved my life so many times and I'm so honored to be a part of your life, I hope you enjoy the music, I hope you cry, laugh, dance, twerk, do the split, do whatever you wanna do. I'm honored to be doing it with you so thank you for listening to Special, loving Special and being special cause if you don't take nothing away from this album I want you to know you're special and I'm so glad you're still with us. Thank you." (Lizzo)

Lizzo has already had a packed 2022 with a double duty hosting and performance gig on Saturday Night Live, plus visits to NBC’s The TODAY Show and CBS’ The Late Late Show with James Corden, the latter of which saw Lizzo teasing “About Damn Time” by giving fans an exclusive first followed by an “80s v Today Dance Bop Riff-Off”.

If she wasn’t busy enough, Lizzo recently added “fashion entrepreneur” to her multi-hyphenate career by joining forces with parent company Fabletics, Inc. for the launch of her revolutionary new shapewear brand, YITTY. Named after her childhood moniker and based on the principles of self-love, radical inner confidence, and effortless, everyday wear, the game-changing, size-inclusive brand marks an industry first: no-shame, smile-inducing shapewear designed for all body types, with sizes ranging from size 6X to XS.

"I needed to go through life and get a lot of things off my chest," she said. "I had a lot happen interpersonally, a lot has happened globally and I think I needed to process that. The way that I process things is through writing music. So I was writing these songs, but then I just needed to keep going until I found my sweet spot and what the world needed to hear. (Lizzo)

"I also wanted to make a thorough album," she continued. "I didn't want to just make a bunch of singles or random songs that I thought were the coolest. I wanted to put a real body of work together so I can make a classic album because I just want to only make classics. I like my music and I want to continue to like my music." (Lizzo)

Lizzo




Lizzo
When you love yourself, anything becomes possible. Channeling boundless self-confidence through a downright earth-quaking voice, colorful persona, and undeniable star power, Lizzo struts into the spotlight and steps up with a whole lot of sass, spirit, and soul. Embracing her vocal range like never before and celebrating herself to the fullest, she speaks her mind, censors nothing, and delivers an enviable level of honesty, pure passion, and fresh fire. In doing so, she reaches the precipice of a personal and creative breakthrough in 2019 as evidenced by a string of new releases for Nice Life Recording Company and Atlantic Records.

“This is a way more confident Lizzo who believes in her confidence,” she exclaims. “For the last three years, I’ve been working on myself and learning how to love who I am. There were moments that would’ve completely defeated me when I was younger. Instead, I was able to not just survive, but thrive. This is the person who I truly want to be. It’s a self-filling prophecy ready for the world. I really found my voice. I love it. I love my body. I love talking shit, and it’s what I’m doing,” she laughs.

She’s quietly worked towards these realizations since the release of her 2016 EP, Coconut Oil, which delivered such hits as “Good As Hell,” “Phone,” “Water Me,” and “Truth Hurts.” Building on enthusiastic critical acclaim and a rapidly growing fan base, 2018 represented a high watermark for the Detroit-born and Houston-raised songstress. A string of singles hit maximum velocity as “Boys” took the culture by storm. A definitive and inescapable anthem for 2018, it closed out the year on Time’s “10 Best Songs of 2018,” Pitchfork’s “100 Best Songs of 2018,” and Paste’s “50 Best Songs of 2018.” She covered both Teen Vogue’s “Pass The Mic Music Issue” and Galore in addition to being profiled in Rolling Stone, the New York Times, V, and Glamour. Allure also proclaimed her among its, “Beauty Disruptors: 12 People Changing the Beauty Industry for the Better.” Additionally, she brought down the house with rapturous performances at Lollapalooza and the MoMa PS1 Warm Up in New York City as well as maintaining an undeniable presence at New York Fashion Week.

However, Lizzo recognized a turning point the summer before everything popped off…

Paying homage to some of music’s most influential women, she took the stage at NPR Music’s “Turning the Tables Live” at Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park Bandshell. During the proceedings, she covered Aretha Franklin’s “Respect” and Lauryn Hill’s “Ex Factor.” The show helped her put a longstanding fear to rest.

“I never really loved my voice,” she admits. “Touring strengthened it, but it’s like I was still afraid of it. When I was able to sing ‘Ex Factor’ and ‘Respect’ by these great vocalists whom I adore, I was really proud for the first time, not just as an artist or a performer, but as a singer. Those are big shoes to fill, and I was able to scream, do runs, belt, and go from soulful to beautiful tones. I left with some brand new shoes of my own though. I finally got my singer heels.” With those heels on, she hit the studio in late 2018 to record her third full-length, Cause I Love You. For the first time, she enlisted the production talents of X Ambassadors’ Sam Harris. Recording in a “haunted ass studio,” the producer encouraged her to break out of her comfort zone. “He reached inside of me and brought out a vulnerability I didn’t realize I had,” she says. “He called out my lyrics by name and pulled them out of my life experiences.”

Galvanized by those sessions, she also reteamed with an old friend Oak Felder [Rihanna, Alessia Cara, Kehlani] as well as longtime collaborator Ricky Reed [Meghan Trainor, Halsey]. She introduced this chapter with “Juice.” Eighties-style synths slink hand-in-hand with a steady beat before climaxing on funky guitar and boisterous horns. She drops eyebrow-raising lines like, “No, I’m not a snack at all. Look, baby, I’m the whole damn meal” before the breakdown, “Somebody come get this man. I think he got lost in my DMs.” Touting the hummable hook, “Blame it on my juice,” she turns up with an empowering call-to-arms.

“I didn’t really have a song talking the way I talked,” she goes on. “This gave me the opportunity to talk the talk and celebrate my swag and all of the hard work I’ve done to get here. It’s a timestamp of where I am in my life right now. I’m enjoying myself on ‘Juice.’”

Whether it’s the emotionally charged “Jerome” or dynamically delicate “Crybaby,” she clings to an overarching message on Cause I Love You intimated by the title.

“I want people to know this process is all because I love them—and because I love me,” she says. “It’s a double-sided statement. You can say Cause I Love You to millions of people, or you can say it to yourself in the mirror. It’s about what you go through when you’re trying to love yourself in a world that makes it so hard. You can persevere and come out stronger on the other side though.”

In the end, Lizzo’s message of empowerment and love rings true because it comes straight from the heart.

“When you listen to this, I want you to know you’re not alone,” she leaves off. “I want you to hear my songs and feel a connection to me. I hope you can apply what I’m saying to your own life and maybe have a better day. Share this experience with me. Celebrate who you are. If I can change the world for the better one song at a time, I’m cool.”



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