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IRL (album)
2023 studio album by Mahalia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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IRL (initialism for In Real Life) is the second studio album by British singer-songwriter Mahalia. The album was released on 14 July 2023 through Warner Music.[2] The album was inspired by the singer's "traumatic breakup" and her visits to "therapy".[3] In support of the album, Mahalia embarked on a tour of the United Kingdom, Europe, North America and Australia, commencing in October 2023 in Leeds[4] and concluding in Brisbane, Australia on 8 May 2024.[5][6]
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Critical reception
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IRL received a score of 80 out of 100 on review aggregator Metacritic based on six critics' reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception.[8] Aggregator AnyDecentMusic? gave it 7.2 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus. Elle Barton of DIY called the album a "delight", writing that it strikes "a perfect balance between familiarity and unpredictability, immediate choruses coexisting with a relaxed, breezy sound".[9] NME's Erica Campbell described the album as "bold, vulnerable, classic R&B", with IRL "reflect[ing] a young woman fully becoming herself, not just confidently throwing her hands up but boldly letting her guard down too".[1]
Red Dziri of The Line of Best Fit wrote that "Mahalia is not casting as wide a net as she did in her career-defining debut" and "if IRL is not as consistent as her previous output, this new album still cements Mahalia as a major R&B/Soul fixture both nationally and abroad".[10] Lucy Fitzgerald, reviewing the album for The Skinny, found it to be "satiny and consistent, [but] sonically and lyrically you're eager for some bigger swings. [...] IRL is like a path reflecting dappled sunlight: we can see patches of brightness but its full light is obscured".[11]
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Track listing
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Notes
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Personnel
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Musicians
- Mahalia – vocals
- JD Reid – keyboards, programming (1, 4–13); drums (1, 4–10, 12, 13), additional vocals (5, 6, 9–11, 13)
- Max Pope – bass guitar (1, 9, 13), guitar (1, 4–7, 9, 11–13)
- Benjamin Stefan Hart – backing vocals (1, 6), additional vocals (9)
- Abby-Lynn Keen – backing vocals (2)
- TheElements – backing vocals (2), bass guitar (2, 3), drums (2, 3), guitar (2), keyboards (2, 3), programming (2, 3), strings (3)
- Raye – backing vocals (3)
- James McMillan – keyboards (3)
- Joyce Wrice – vocals (4)
- Rosie Danvers – string arrangement (5)
- Spencer Stewart – string arrangement, programming, synthesizer (5)
- Wired Strings[a] – string orchestra (5)
- JoJo – vocals (5)
- Lea Vivyen – piano (6, 13)
- Stormzy – vocals (6)
- Daniel Traynor – keyboards, programming, synthesizer (8)
- Destin Conrad – vocals (9)
- James Essien – additional vocals (10)
- Kojey Radical – vocals (10)
- Cameron Dawson – bass guitar (11)
Technical
- Stuart Hawkes – mastering
- Geoff Swan – mixing
- JD Reid – engineering (1, 4–12)
- TheElements – engineering (2, 3)
- Matt Barnes – engineering (3), vocal engineering (3, 4)
- Spencer Stewart – engineering (5)
- Grades – engineering (8)
- Alex Robinson – vocal engineering (2)
- Isabel Gracefield – string engineering (5)
- James Kirk – additional vocal engineering (5)
- Carlos Mas – additional vocal engineering (10)
- Max Blue Churchill – vocal engineering assistance (3)
- Max Anstruther – string engineering assistance (5)
Charts
Release history
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Notes
- Wired Strings consists of cellist Rosie Danvers, violists Bryony Mycroft and Meghan Cassidy, and violinists Ellie Stanford, Hayley Pomfrett, Jenny Sacha, Miles Brett, Patrick Kiernan, Sally Jackson, and Stephen Morris.
References
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