Sucker is the second studio album by English singer
Charli XCX, released on 15 December 2014 by
Asylum and
Atlantic Records. The album was met with positive reviews from critics, praising its throwback style, and ended up being included on many year-end lists for best albums of 2014. Sucker spawned the singles "
Boom Clap", "
Break the Rules", "
Doing It" (featuring
Rita Ora) and "
Famous".
Charli XCX promoted the album through a series of public appearances and televised live performances, as well as appearing on the
Jingle Ball Tour 2014. The album was supported by Charli XCX's
Girl Power North America Tour, which lasted from September to October 2014. She was also the opening act for the European leg of
Katy Perry's
Prismatic World Tour in 2015.
Background
In 2013, Charli XCX released her first major studio album, True Romance. The album received positive reviews by music critics, who praised its unique style. However, the album failed to chart on major markets. On 13 March 2014, she revealed to Complex that she had begun working on her second album with
Weezer frontman
Rivers Cuomo and
Rostam Batmanglij of
Vampire Weekend.[7]Stargate duo and
John Hill were also confirmed as producers.[8] In an interview with DIY magazine, she stated that she wrote the record for girls and wants them to feel "a sense of
empowerment".[9] Charli XCX explained in her tour diary with Replay Laserblast that the record's genre is still
pop, but has "a very shouty,
girl-power, girl-gang,
Bow Wow Wow" feel to it at the same time.[10] She also said in an interview with Idolator that Sucker would be influenced by
the Hives,
Weezer, the
Ramones and
1960syé-yé music.[11]
On 7 January 2015, it was announced that the European release of the album would be pushed back yet again to 16 February 2015, featuring a revised track listing, including the new version of "Doing It" featuring
Rita Ora, as well as the tracks "So Over You" and "Red Balloon".[12]
"
Boom Clap", the first single released from Sucker, was released worldwide on 17 June 2014. It was originally part of the
soundtrack album for The Fault in Our Stars. The song was a commercial success, peaking at number six on the
UK Singles Chart and number eight on the
Billboard Hot 100. The song has since sold more than one million copies in the United States, receiving platinum certification by the
Recording Industry Association of America,[20] and has been certified silver by the
British Phonographic Industry. There are two existing
mixes of this song: the first and original one is heard on the film, the film's soundtrack, and the music video shot in
Amsterdam; the second mix is heard on the music video shot in Japan and in this album.[citation needed]
"
Break the Rules" was released as the second single from the album. The song and its accompanying music video were released on 25 August 2014.[21] The song was moderately successful, reaching number four in Germany, number six in Austria, number 10 in Australia and the top 40 in Belgium, France, Norway and in Charli XCX's native UK. Moreover, the song peaked at number 91 on the US
Billboard Hot 100, her second consecutive entry on the chart.[citation needed]
"
Doing It" was released on 3 February 2015 as the album's third single. The single version features English singer Rita Ora. Details of the collaboration first emerged when a setlist for
BBC Radio 1 appeared on
Twitter which featured the song.[22] It peaked at number eight on the UK Singles Chart.
"
Famous" was released on 29 May 2015 as the fourth and final single from the album.[23] The music video was released on 23 March 2015.[24]
Other songs
The tracks "London Queen" and "Gold Coins" premiered in advance of the album's release on 6 October and 17 November 2014, respectively.[25][26] A music video for the song "Breaking Up" was released on 2 December 2014.[27]
In November 2014, the album's European bonus track "Red Balloon" was used in a trailer for the 2015 animated film Home.[28] The song was also included on the
film's soundtrack, curated by
Rihanna.[29]
Sucker received generally positive reviews from music critics. At
Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from
mainstream critics, Sucker received an average score of 75, based on 25 reviews.[31]Will Hermes of Rolling Stone stated that "Sucker is no
retro gesture: Charli runs the album's
rock & roll guitars and attitude through enough distressed digital production and thumb type vernacular to make this the first fully updated iteration of
punk pop in ages... Like so many of the pop pleasures here, it's a sentiment that just never gets old."[37] Miles Raymer of Entertainment Weekly commented that "SUCKER is pop-punk, radically redefined and dragged, middle fingers waving, into the future."[3]Brian Mansfield of USA Today wrote, "On Sucker, XCX doesn't just tweak the ear-candy pop template, she blows it up, then pries the shiniest bits from the asphalt. It's still sweet once she's finished sticking it back together, but it's got a bit of crunch, too."[39] At
AllMusic, Heather Phares opined that the album's "mix of youth and sophistication is more than a little volatile, and sometimes it feels like XCX is still figuring out what really works for her music... Nevertheless, it succeeds as an introduction to Charli XCX the Pop Star while retaining her whip-smart songwriting and attitude."[32]
Dan Weiss of Spin expressed that "Sucker is just an exceptionally good pop album... Those are rare enough as it is."[38] James Rainis of Slant Magazine viewed the album as "the sound of a long-incubating star emerging so fully formed on an international stage that it's difficult to figure that an artist gifted with so much sneering bravado was ever thought of as an
underdog... Someone needed to author the aural equivalent of the body shot, and Charli XCX has provided the
platonic ideal of just that: a party album charged equally with punkish rebellion,
hip-hop cool, and pop universality."[40] Jamieson Cox of Pitchfork felt that "Sucker isn't an endpoint for Charli [...] and it's not her finest work, but it's plenty good enough to rope a
cohort of new fans into what's promising to be one hell of a creative ride."[5]Jon Pareles, reviewing positively for The New York Times, emphasizes "Sucker is far more direct; it's smart, loud, cheeky, gimmick-loving pop, intent on making every song go bang... The ambition and calculation on Sucker are overt but not a deal-breaker. It's a brittle, professional album full of sonic treats."[41]
Accolades
The album was named the best pop album of the year by Rolling Stone, who said, "Charli XCX is the pop star
2014 was waiting for: a badass songwriting savant who's the most fun girl in any room she steps into. The 22-year-old artist came into her own with Sucker, a middle-finger-waving teenage riot packed into 13
punky gems. It's a dance party, a
mosh pit and a
feminist rally – Charli's definitely in charge."[42]Spin ranked it the sixth pop album of 2014, commenting that "Charli's second full-length shaves off the densely layered atmospherics and dreamy soundscapes."[43] Meanwhile, Jason Lipshutz from Billboard listed Sucker as the second best pop album of 2014. NME listed Sucker as the 32nd best album of 2015.[44]
Sucker debuted at number 28 on the US
Billboard 200 with first-week sales of 28,907 copies, making it Charli XCX's first album to enter the chart.[47] The album entered the
UK Albums Chart at number 15, selling 5,622 copies in its first week.[48] The album's UK sales as of May 2020 stood at 46,667 units.[49]
US physical releases censor "fuck" in the title track with a
bleep, while all other expletives in the song and the rest of the album are intact.
The version of "Boom Clap" found in the album is the same from the Japanese music video and is different from the version heard in the original music video and in The Fault in Our Stars.
Personnel
Credits adapted from the liner notes of the European edition of Sucker.[57]