Samiksha Jaiswal (Editor)

The Female Boss

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Length
  
58:27

Release date
  
26 November 2012

Artist
  
Tulisa

Genres
  
Contemporary R&B, Grime

The Female Boss httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb6

Released
  
30 November 2012 (2012-11-30)

Label
  
All Around the World Productions

Producers
  
The-Dream, Fazer, Patrick Jordan-Patrikios

Similar
  
LoveLiveLife, Uncle B, La salsa vive, Campamento Labandón, Buscamos Sonrisas

Tulisa intro


The Female Boss is the debut studio album by British singer and former N-Dubz member Tulisa. It was released on 3 December 2012 via All Around the World and Island Records. The album's artwork was revealed on 6 October 2012 via Tulisa's official Facebook page. The Female Boss originally was to be released on 26 November but was pushed back by one week. It incorporates hip hop, dance and R&B styles while enlisting a variety of producers; The-Dream, Fazer, Stereotypes, Rico Love, Diane Warren and Ed White, among others. The album features guests appearances from British rapper Wiley, American rapper Tyga and Nines. Three singles preceded the album's release; the lead single "Young" peaked at number 1 while "Live It Up" and "Sight of You" peaked within the top 20 of the UK Singles Chart.

Contents

Upon its release, The Female Boss has received generally negative reviews from most music critics, with many critics panning the themes, intro of the album, production and some lyrical content, while some critics felt the dance songs were highlights. Commercially, the album opened with poor sales, debuting at number 35 on the UK Albums Chart and number 55 in Ireland.

Tulisa foreigner the female boss album full song


Background

Recording of the album began in July 2011 and concluded in May 2012, with the release of the lead single, the summer club party anthem, "Young". The album's second single, urban party hit "Live It Up", was released on 9 September 2012, before the ballad "Sight of You" was released on 25 November 2012 as the album's third single. Tulisa revealed that her decision to release three singles prior to the album's release was to "focus on the long-term sales of the record". "Visa" was originally recorded by N-Dubz for their third studio album, Love.Live.Life in 2010 but didn't make the final track list.

Tulisa said of the album in an interview with Digital Spy: "Having a number one album isn't important. Let me tell you something, do you know how many artists go to number one in the charts and they release on a certain week because they know that in that week they have more chance of going to number one? Then they drop out of the album charts a week later and they might have sold 100,000 when they could have sold 400,000. For me, just like with N-Dubz, I don't care about having a number one album, I care about going platinum. I care about the overall sales. What's the point in having a number one but people saying, 'She only sold 60,000 though'? I don't want that. Most people these days kind of drop the one single and then the album but that was one thing I said I would never do," she explained. "I have to put the background work in. I've got to give people a reason to buy it. I want to prove myself this year, more than ever, as a musician and as a solo artist."

Critical response

The Female Boss has received overwhelmingly negative reviews from contemporary music critics. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, The Female Boss received an average score of 35, which indicates "generally unfavourable reviews", based on 6 reviews. Robert Heller from Metro.co.uk awarded a sole star out of five, jokingly comparing "Freddy Krueger scratching an infinite blackboard" to the album. He criticized the album's so called "pop music" saying "Pop does not have to be like this" and "The rest continues the pound-shop Rihanna sound without the panache." Lewis Corner from Digital Spy was less harsh, but criticised the production with The-Dream saying "The result is an overly-considered debut that suffers from one-too-many label hook-ups for a singer who is way out of her depth." Phil Mongredien from The Observer awarded it two stars out of five believing her debut didn't sound promising. Amy Gravelle from Entertainmentwise felt that the R&B and Hip-Hop songs were main issues on the album and felt she should stick to dance music, and criticised her "cliched lyrics" and themes on the entire album.

Philip Matusavage from MusicOMH awarded it a single star out of five, saying "[The Female Boss] is more endurance test than anything else, with the strong sense of ‘will this do?’." He panned the intro and themes, calling them "hilarious" and felt "bafflement is typical of an album which has almost no identity of its own, instead sounding like a calculated effort to target certain demographic markets." Q gave it a mixed review, feeling the album "Struggles to get to grips with the predictably generic R&B ballads." Aneet Nijjar from Allmusic rated the album one-and-a-half stars out of five. In comparison to her former band N-Dubz, she stated they had "have bags of charisma, and most important of all, the songs" but stated the album "has neither." She found that Tulisa didn't "convince" her abilities of producing pop and urban music and criticised it for being "fleeting and insufficient", calling the album "a lamentable debut all round."

On a more positive review, Andy Gill from The Independent compared the album to works of Rihanna, saying she "tries to turn adversity to her advantage, employing the incident as her own version of the familiar R&B soap-opera gambit, whereby the private life becomes the subtext," but he nevertheless felt most of the songs were bad.

Commercial performance

The Female Boss entered the UK Album Chart lower than its midweek position of 17, debuting at number 35. The following week the album dropped out of the Top 40, falling to number 63. In comparison, fellow N-Dubz member Dappy's debut studio album Bad Intentions which made the top ten at number six, selling 12,000 copies.

Singles

"Young" was released as the album's lead single on 29 April 2012. The single went straight to number one in the United Kingdom, becoming the fastest selling debut single of the year, and the third fastest selling single overall, following the release of Cheryl Cole's "Call My Name".

"Live It Up" was released as the album's second single on 10 September 2012. The track was announced on 24 July, and features vocals from American rapper Tyga. Tulisa commented on the song, saying: "This track is me going back to being me, and trying to define myself as an artist. It's even more urban than anything else i've done before". The music video was released on 24 August 2012 and the single peaked at number 11 on the UK Singles Chart.

"Sight of You" and "Live Your Life" were released as a double A-side, and the album's third single on 25 November 2012. On 11 September, Tulisa revealed that "Sight of You" would be a "Christmassy ballad", stating "I think it's important for every artist to have that ballad that stands the test of time." "Live Your Life" (previously revealed to be "Freedom", and later re-titled) was written and produced by fellow N-Dubz musician Fazer, and is similar to her debut single, "Young". The song premiered on radio on 19 October 2012. Tulisa confirmed during an interview with KissFM that the music video would be released on 22 October. She performed the single on The X Factor on 2 December. The song entered the UK Singles Chart at number 18, becoming Tulisa's lowest-charting solo single in the UK.

Songs

Intro1:19
Young4:13
Live It Up3:52

References

The Female Boss Wikipedia