
Channel Orange is a Soul & Funk album by Frank Ocean, originally released in 2012. On Gatefold: 93 pressings tracked, owned by 46 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Soul & Funk
- Contemporary R&B
- lush
- yearning
- nocturnal
About
The lead-up to Frank Ocean’s culture-shifting debut album, which included the seemingly out-of-nowhere 2011 mixtape <i>Nostalgia, Ultra</i>, was mired in mystery: Who was this elusive, vintage-car-obsessed crooner, and why was he a member of the rambunctious, uncouth youth movement known as Odd Future? Why wasn’t he signed to a record label—or was he? And how had we never heard of the inventive songwriter behind singles for Brandy, Bieber, and Beyoncé? By the summer of 2012, all had been revealed: through the popularity of <i>Nostalgia, Ultra</i>, Ocean had forced his songwriting deal with Def Jam into a solo career, and <i>channel ORANGE</i> was full of laconic, literary tracks about the underbelly of Southern California life with a Didion-esque intensity and detail. “The best song wasn’t the single, but you weren’t either,” he sings iconically on “Sweet Life,” an acerbic mission statement for an album that defined a new era of laid-back—and disillusioned—R&B which positioned that B-sides are where the richest text resides. Ocean’s secret weapon was his lack of fealty to format; he disliked being categorized as an R&B singer because of its racialized history in the music industry, and also because he was so nimble across genres, experimenting with songs that could as easily be played on a Thursday night at a piano bar (“Super Rich Kids”) as during a coronation dance for prom royalty (“Forrest Gump”). His sweeping sense of song structure came to fruition on the 10-minute-long “Pyramids,” a psychedelic journey through hard techno, ambient, and guitar-riffing synth pop. And the album’s guest stars—Earl Sweatshirt, John Mayer, André 3000—were emblematic of how well his artistry was regarded leading up to his first official album. Though it may sound compact in relation to the work he’d go on to release, Ocean’s ambitious songwriting set his place as a massive influence on music across genres—pop, hip-hop, and, yes, R&B too.
via Apple Music
The Clerk's got thoughts on this one. Mosh members get the full take →
Tracklist
- 1Start0:45
- 2Thinkin Bout You3:20
- 3Fertilizer0:39
- 4Sierra Leone2:28
- 5Sweet Life4:22
- 6Not Just Money0:59
- 7Super Rich Kids5:04
- 8Pilot Jones3:04
- 9Crack Rock3:44
- 10Pyramids9:52
- 11Lost3:54
- 12White1:16
- 13Monks3:20
- 14Bad Religion2:55
- 15Pink Matter4:28
- 16Forrest Gump3:14
- 17.1End2:14
- 17.2(silence)1:30
- 17.3Golden Girl4:59
Credits
Performers
- Francisco TorresBRASS
- Irvin MayfieldBRASS
- Matt ChamberlainDRUMS PROGRAMMED BY DRUM PROGRAMMING
- Andre 3000GUITAR FEATURING
- John MayerGUITAR FEATURING ELECTRIC GUITAR
- Taylor JohnsonGUITAR
- Charlie HunterGUITAR BASS
- Frank OceanKEYBOARDS
- Jeff BabkoKEYBOARDS
- Shea TaylorKEYBOARDS
- Pharrell WilliamsKEYBOARDS PROGRAMMED BY DRUM PROGRAMMING
- MalayKEYBOARDS PROGRAMMED BY GUITAR
- Om'Mas KeithKEYBOARDS VOCALS
- Chuck PalmerSTRINGS
- Dave EggarSTRINGS
- Sara ParkinsSTRINGS
- Auntie RosieVOCALS
- Crimson Tide CheerleadersVOCALS
46 collectors on Gatefold own this · 93 pressings tracked on Gatefold
