Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Motordrome (album)

2022 studio album by MØ From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Motordrome (album)
Remove ads

Motordrome is the third studio album by Danish singer and songwriter , released on 28 January 2022 through Columbia Records, three years after her album Forever Neverland (2018).[1] It was announced alongside the release of the singles "Brad Pitt" and "Goosebumps" on 12 November 2021, and also includes the singles "Live to Survive" and "Kindness". MØ embarked on a tour in Europe and North America from February 2022 in support of the album.

Quick facts Studio album by MØ, Released ...

Motordrome received generally favorable reviews from critics, with a Metacritic score of 68 based on 10 reviews. While some reviewers praised its inventive direction and energetic production, others felt it lacked consistency. The album charted at number nine in Denmark.

Remove ads

Background

MØ began work on Motordrome to help herself "out of a downward spiral – out of the motor d[r]ome of her own head".[2] She characterised the album as being "about both the sadness and the joy of making changes in your life" and stated that she hopes Motordrome feels "genuine" to listeners in the sense that "there are stories there that they can connect with".[3] She also expressed that the album "represents a huge change in my life. Even though I'm still doing what I love doing, it does feel like a new chapter. That is scary, but it's freeing."[4]

Remove ads

Singles

"Live to Survive" was issued as the first single on 28 May 2021,[5] followed two months later by second single "Kindness" on 30 July.[6] The official album announcement on 12 November 2021 was accompanied by the double singles "Brad Pitt" and "Goosebumps".[2] On 28 January 2022, the fifth single "New Moon" was released, alongside the album.[7] The sixth single, "True Romance", was released on 17 June, as album's The Dødsdrom Edition.[8] Two months later, "Spaceman" was released as the album's seventh and final single from The Dødsdrom Edition on 12 August.[9]

Remove ads

Critical reception

Summarize
Perspective
More information Aggregate scores, Source ...

Motordrome has received generally favourable reviews from music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album has an average score of 68 based on ten reviews.[11]

Writing for Slant Magazine, Charles Lyons-Burt gave the album rating 2.5 out of 5 stars and wrote, "When Ørsted ramps up the bombast, Motordrome reaches a serviceable level of pop pageantry. But most of the singer's cooed melodies feel comparatively half-hearted. Ultimately, the album has a way of getting your attention and failing to keep it."[21] In a positive review Gigwise's Adam England stated that "MØ sound might have evolved to incorporate both her previous material and her teenage tastes, but this could be her best album yet. It's algorithm, baby."[15] El Hunt from NME stated "The record doesn't always hit the mark" and add that "The immensely memorable hooks on show certainly help, too – but after Motordrome's fizzled out, you're left wishing the engines revved a little louder."[18] The Independent's Helen Brown opined that "Tracks have enough energy to keep limbs twitching, but not enough force to pull bystanders from the walls."[16] Writing for Clash, Robin Murray felt that "Motordrome utilises its 10 track span to broach a number of fresh ideas; spinning the dial once more, MØ is able to conjure something fresh, taking risks that few peers would attempt".[12] Writing for The Line of Best Fit, John Amen lauded the album, concluding that "Motordrome is a multifaceted delight and an early contender for pop album of the year."[17]

Tour

MØ made the first announcement of her Motordrome World Tour Chapter One tour dates on 12 November 2021, and ticket sales were available from 17 November 2021.[22] The tour covered Europe and North America.[4] However, on 17 December on social media, the singer wrote that concert dates in Europe had been postponed from February to May due to coronavirus restrictions.[23] In March, the singer performed with Imagine Dragons as a support act on their North American tour Mercury World Tour. The tour began on 26 February 2022, in Chicago.[24]

Remove ads

Track listing

Summarize
Perspective
More information No., Title ...
More information No., Title ...

Notes

Remove ads

Personnel

Musicians

  • – vocals
  • Jake Braun – cello (1)
  • SG Lewis – bass, drums, guitar, keyboards, programming, synthesizer (2)
  • Rasmus Littauer – programming (5), drums (10)
  • Andreas Lund – guitar (6)
  • Josefine Struckmann Pedersen – background vocals (7)
  • Melissa Gregerson – background vocals (7)
  • Ronni Vindahl – guitar (7)
  • August Rosenbaum – piano (8)
  • Yangze – piano (8)
  • Live Johansson – cello (10)
  • Karen Johanne Pedersen – violin (10)

Technical

  • Emily Lazarmastering
  • Chris Allgood – mastering (1, 3–10)
  • Geoff Swan – mixing (1, 3–10)
  • Serban Ghenea – mixing (2)
  • Jasmine Chen – engineering (1, 4)
  • Matt DiMona – engineering (1, 4)
  • John Hanes – engineering (2)
  • Anthony Dolhai – engineering (7)
  • Karen Marie Ørsted – vocal production (1, 3–5, 9)
  • Ariel Rechtshaid – vocal production (1, 4)
  • SG Lewis – vocal production (2)
  • Sly – vocal production (2)
  • Caroline Ailin – vocal production (2)
  • Ronni Vindahl – vocal production (3, 9)
Remove ads

Charts

More information Chart (2022), Peak position ...

Release history

More information Region, Date ...
Remove ads

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads