Body Talk Pt. 1

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Body Talk Pt. 1
Studio album by
Released11 June 2010 (2010-06-11)
Recorded2009–2010
Genre
Length30:31
LabelKonichiwa
Producer
Robyn chronology
Robyn
(2005)
Body Talk Pt. 1
(2010)
Body Talk Pt. 2
(2010)
Alternative cover
North American cover
Singles from Body Talk Pt. 1
  1. "
    Dancing On My Own
    "

    Released: 1 June 2010

Body Talk Pt. 1 is the fifth

Dancing On My Own", was released on 1 June. Robyn promoted the album with the All Hearts Tour she co-headlined with Kelis. Body Talk Pt. 1 reached number one in Sweden and number four in Denmark and Norway. In the United States, it peaked at number three on Billboard's Dance/Electronic Albums
chart.

Background

Following Robyn's career relaunch and "

synthpop "breakthrough" Robyn in Sweden in spring 2005, she promoted and toured the record with several subsequent editions and singles globally, taking advantage of the mid-2000s social media explosion to "amass a new 'netroots' fanbase" until the winter of late 2008.[3] Work began on the album in July 2009 in Stockholm with Swedish producer Klas Åhlund, who also served as its executive producer. Returning to recording, Robyn revisited the records she loved and drew inspiration from including Laurie Anderson's Big Science, Prince's Dirty Mind, the Knife's Silent Shout, Janet Jackson's Control, Technotronic's Pump Up the Jam, Kate Bush's The Kick Inside, Black Box's Dreamland and work by Kraftwerk, David Bowie, KLF, TLC, Neneh Cherry, Dr. Alban, Gossip, DJ Mujava, Booka Shade and Gui Boratto.[4][5][6][7][8]

In early spring 2010, in an interview with Swedish magazine Bon, Robyn announced that she had plans to release three new albums throughout the year: "I got all these great songs so why not? [...] It's been 5 years since Robyn and I didn't want to wait with a release until they are all recorded, so I decided to start putting them out right away."[9] Robyn told Popjustice journalist Peter Robinson, "It's been a long time since I actually made a record! And I was thinking of how to shorten that time down and Eric, my manager, came up with the idea of what if I just start releasing songs, then I can tour them, then I can make some more songs. We started working like that. I think once it starts it will make more sense – you can just keep releasing stuff without the long breaks."[10] The release of Body Talk Pt. 1 was announced on 6 April 2010, alongside the cover art and track listing.[11][12] Robyn said that "the songs that are on the first album are simply the first ones that were finished."[10]

Lyrics and production

In an interview with

humanity".[10]

Robyn collaborated with Norwegian electronic music duo Röyksopp at their studio in Oslo on the song "None of Dem".[7] American producer Diplo produced the song "Dancehall Queen" with Åhlund, which came together during a discussion of Ace of Base: "We were just having fun with that kind of genre music. And the idea of making this song came out of that discussion. It was fun. We really connected on something where music that you might put in one box becomes something else, depending on how you look at it."[14] On the decision to record a dancehall inspired song despite of Robyn's nationality she said, "In my world, there are people who have already pushed those boundaries [of crossing styles] forward enough for me to feel comfortable doing a song like 'Dancehall Queen', so it's not a big deal to me."[13] The last song on the album, "Jag vet en dejlig rosa" is a recording of a traditional Swedish folk song, famously recorded by jazz singer Monica Zetterlund. Robyn said, "I always listened to her, and she made this classic jazz album in the 60s [Waltz for Debby] with Bill Evans, which was quite a spectacular thing in Sweden at that time. 'Jag vet en dejlig rosa' was one of the songs they did, and when [producer] Klas [Åhlund] and I were in the studio, he bought exactly the same microphone that she recorded that album on. So we got all excited and decided to record the song."[13]

Singles

Robyn stated in an interview with Swedish magazine

Hot Dance Club Songs chart in the US, and became her fourth UK top-10 entry, peaking at number eight.[22][23] It also charted in Denmark, Norway, Belgium (Flanders) and Germany.[21]

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
Metacritic76/100[24]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[25]
The A.V. ClubB+[26]
Drowned in Sound7/10[27]
The Guardian[28]
NME7/10[29]
Pitchfork8.5/10[30]
PopMatters7/10[31]
Rolling Stone[32]
Slant Magazine[33]
Spin8/10[34]

Body Talk, Pt. 1 received generally positive reviews from most music critics. At

produced, fantastically sung, and loaded with memorable choruses, this eight-song effort has plenty to please everyone from post-dubstep crate diggers to teen tweeters—often at the same time."[30] The A.V. Club's Genevieve Koski opined that it is "an album about aligning your heartbeat with the pulse of strobe lights and basslines, embracing synthetic sounds as a conduit for genuine emotion. Robyn's icy, controlled vocals and cool synth textures are almost alienating in their precision, but there's a beating pulse underneath the dance-bot artifice that captures the celebratory catharsis that can be found on the dance floor."[26] Michael Cragg of musicOMH wrote that with Body Talk Pt. 1, Robyn is "ready to finally take her place at pop's top table of greats."[35]

Madonna, if not earlier." However, he also noted that "[n]ot all of Body Talk, Pt. 1 works", referring to "Dancehall Queen" as "the only real bomb".[31] Luke Lewis of NME called the album "impressive, but thin at eight tracks", while concluding, "Would it not have been better to hold back, and release just one, truly stunning record?"[29] Matthew Horton of BBC Music felt that the album "triggers the sense Robyn's holding something back" and that it "houses so much filler", but nevertheless described "Fembot", "Dancing On My Own" and "Cry When You Get Older" as "scorchingly catchy, and laced with Robyn's familiar cordial of sparkling hook mixed with unutterable poignancy."[36]

Track listing

No.TitleLyricsMusicProducer(s)Length
1."Don't Fucking Tell Me What to Do"
  • Torbjørn Brundtland
Röyksopp5:13
7."Hang with Me" (acoustic version)ÅhlundÅhlundÅhlund3:18
8."Jag vet en dejlig rosa"TraditionalTraditionalÅhlund2:11
Total length:30:31
iTunes Store bonus track[37]
No.TitleLength
9."Dancing On My Own" (radio version)4:13
Total length:34:44
Amazon MP3 bonus track[38]
No.TitleLength
9."Dancing On My Own" (PMS remix)3:12
Total length:33:43

Notes

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Body Talk Pt. 1.[39]

Musicians

  • Robyn – vocals (all tracks); instruments, programming (tracks 1, 3, 4); arrangement (track 8)
  • Klas Åhlund – instrumentats, programming (tracks 1, 2, 4); arrangement (tracks 7, 8); Mellotron vibraphone (track 8)
  • Patrik Berger – instruments, programming (track 3)
  • Diplo
    – instruments, programming (track 5)
  • Röyksopp – instruments, programming (track 6)
  • Robert Elofsson – piano (track 7)
  • Simona Bonfiglioli – strings (track 7)
  • Claudia Bonfiglioli – strings (track 7)
  • Erik Arvinder – strings (track 7)
  • Patrik Swedrup – strings (track 7)
  • Marianne Herresthal – strings (track 7)
  • Pelle Hansen – strings (track 7)

Technical

  • Klas Åhlund – production (tracks 1, 2, 4, 5, 7, 8); mixing (tracks 1, 7, 8); executive production
  • Robyn – co-production (tracks 1, 3, 4)
  • Niklas Flyckt – mixing (tracks 2–6)
  • Röyksopp – production (track 6)
  • Tom Coyne – mastering

Artwork

  • Mary Fagot – creative direction
  • Lucy McRae – art direction, body architect
  • Johan Renck – photography
  • Sandberg&Timonen (Adamsky) – typography

Charts

Certifications

Region Certification Certified units/sales
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[58] Gold 15,000^
Sweden (GLF)[59] Gold 20,000

^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

Region Date Format Label Ref.
Ireland 11 June 2010 [60]
United Kingdom 14 June 2010 [61]
Denmark Konichiwa [62]
Finland
Norway
Sweden
United States 15 June 2010
[63]
Germany 18 June 2010 Ministry of Sound [64]
Australia Modular [65]
New Zealand

References

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