Flamboyant | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | July 17, 2019 | |||
Studio | Live Nation Studios | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 31:08 | |||
Label | Self-released | |||
Producer |
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Dorian Electra chronology | ||||
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Singles from Flamboyant | ||||
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Flamboyant is the debut studio album by American singer and songwriter Dorian Electra. The album was self-released by Electra on July 17, 2019. [1] A deluxe edition featuring four new tracks and a remix was released on January 17, 2020. It was promoted by the singles "Career Boy", "Man To Man", "Flamboyant", and "Daddy Like". Music videos were released for "Adam & Steve" and "Guyliner". The album received acclaim from critics, who praised the production, LGBTQ related lyrics and Electra’s vocal performances.
Electra released all of the stems for the album for fans to remix on January 17, 2020. [2] An album featuring instrumentals of every song on the deluxe edition was made available on May 1, 2020. [3] An album of voice memo demo recordings of songs from the album was released on May 14, 2020. [4]
Dorian Electra first began making music as a student, attending a progressive school that allowed them to hand in songs in place of traditional assignments. [5] During this time, and later at Shimer College in Chicago, Electra made songs on philosophical and academic topics such as Friedrich Hayek and René Descartes. [6] They came to identify with the emotional immediacy of pop music during their time at college, having previously only enjoyed the genre on an ironic level. [7] After graduating, they were hired to make pop-infused educational videos on subjects including sexuality, drag, and history for the feminist outlet Refinery29. [8]
In 2017, Electra appeared on the A. G. Cook-produced song "Femmebot" for Charli XCX's mixtape Pop 2. [7] [9] According to Electra, Charli XCX was the artist that most paved the way for their career, [7] with XCX giving Electra advice on being an independent artist and the two collaborating on the "Femmebot Fantasy" party tour in 2018. [7] [8] According to an article from Tidal, Flamboyant was completed over the course of a week at an airbnb in Las Vegas in January 2019. [8] Paper Magazine states that Electra did not participate in the production or mixing of the record but "carefully orchestrated [its] mood". [7]
In June 2018, Electra came out as non-binary and released "Career Boy", [8] which was followed in December with "Man to Man". [10] [11] The final singles, "Flamboyant" and "Daddy Like", were released that April and June, respectively. [12] [13] Electra announced that Flamboyant would be their debut album in May, and it was self-released on July 17, 2019. [14] [15] A release party was held at the Pico Union Project in Los Angeles. [16]
Electra supported the release of the album with a Flamboyant tour, [17] [18] which received a second leg in 2020. [19] A deluxe version of the album was released on January 17, 2020. [19]
Flamboyant has been described as hyperpop, [20] experimental pop, [9] dance pop and electropop, [7] [21] and it includes elements of genres ranging from heavy metal to new wave and Baroque music. [9] Electra wanted the cover to reflect this range of genres as it incorporates visuals associated with pop music, punk and heavy metal, and appears almost like a portrait of Mozart. [9] The album focuses on themes of masculinity and queerness. Many of its songs deal with gender stereotypes and attempt to view them in a new light. [21] [22] [23] They use parody and theatricality to critique social norms and comment on social justice issues. Electra has called the album "a celebration as much as a critique" and it aims to build up new positive forms of masculinity. [7] [24]
The title of the album is a reclamation of the word flamboyant, which has historically been used to shame effeminate gay men. Electra wanted to play with the etymology of the word to recast it in a positive light. For Electra, its origin as a style of gothic architecture incorporating flame-like designs and bold colors, which eventually came to signify something "bright and colourful that you couldn't look away from", mirrors the modern use of the term to mean "proud, and loud, and out there". [22] [6]
"Career Boy" satirizes the hypermasculinity of work bro culture and how capitalism incentivizes overwork. [5] [6] [24] The song was produced by Will Vaughan with a stereotypical EDM sound to represent the intensity of the central "Career Boy" figure. [25] Electra aimed to "[tear apart]" this over-the-top persona [25] while remaining sympathetic to them and ultimately presenting them as a queer character that LGBTQ fans could identify with. [5] [6] In "Daddy Like", Electra wanted to challenge masculine archetypes that fall under the category of "sugar daddy" but also to de-stigmatize people engaged in such relationships. [6] [26] They also wanted to make the term daddy more inclusive by making a fun-sounding song that would make anybody feel like they could be a daddy "regardless of their identity". [13] Paper Magazine considered the track to have "sticky melodies" and direct lyrics, [26] which cover themes of gender and consent. [7] [26]
"Emasculate" features the use of wordplay, equivocating between literal and figurative meanings of the term emasculation, [23] and "grungy S&M beats". [22] "Man to Man" subverts the concept of toxic masculinity by suggesting that true masculinity is vulnerable and sensitive. [24] [27] [10] Billboard described the song's sound as "Baroque-pop goes '80s new wave-meets-Prince" and identified the futility of cancel culture as another theme. [9] Vogue Singapore praised Electra's vocals on the song and the "irresistibly catchy hook" with its layered use of synths. [28] "Musical Genius" mixes elements of dubstep and trap with "harpsichord twinkles". [9] The title track "Flamboyant" is an electropop song with maximalist production, [29] incorporating J-pop synths and piano chords, garage rock-inspired guitar riffs, metal drums, whip sounds, and autotuned vocals. [8] [29] [20] The lyrics encompass a commitment to being yourself in defiance of others' judgement. [7] [12]
Gay Times described "Guyliner" as a spiritual successor to "Femmebot" with its use of exaggerated vocal distortions. [22] "Live by the Sword", about living with integrity, [7] sounded like the "backing track for an intergalactic joust" according to Chicago Reader. [20] "Adam & Steve" is a gay rendition of the Christian Genesis story inspired by the homophobic phrase "It's Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve". [7] [30] It reclaims the phrase to challenge the idea that God does not love gay people. [22] [30] Musically, it contains elements of electronica, 2000s R&B, heavy metal and religious music. [22] [9] [31] It was ranked as the 7th best song of 2019 by Paper Magazine. [32] "Freaky 4 Life" was described as the album's constitution and an "outsider's mission statement" with "pulsating synths and guitar riffs". [7] [24]
The music videos for Flamboyant were noted for their character sketches that parody masculine tropes and "high-concept visuals". [7] [21] Electra co-directed the videos with their partner Weston Ellen, apart from "Career Boy" which was directed by Charlotte Rutherford. [7]
A number of outlets compared the campy masculinity in the "Flamboyant" music video with Liberace; [5] [29] [12] the Chicago Reader called it "a Liberace fever dream" [20] and The Guardian called it "a celebration of foppishness". [6] It features a mix of period and modern fashion with "surgical neons and futuristic pastels". Electra aimed to deconstruct notions such as heteronormativity and the gender binary with the Liberace-esque effeminate masculinity. [5] The music video for "Adam & Steve", a gay presentation of the Genesis story, shows a subversion of the exorcism trope: when the gay character is exorcised, an angel is revealed instead of a demon. The video ends with Adam and Steve kissing in Heaven. The theologian Yannick Schlote cites these subversions as examples of the video portraying God's acceptance of gay love. [30]
The music video for "Career Boy" combines the sex appeal of a traditional pop music video with "weird and scary" BDSM imagery to symbolize the way in which workaholic employees participate in their own subjugation. [7] [25] The "Daddy Like" music video features colorful visuals alongside campy outfits and caricatures of male success. [26] [22] The "Man to Man" music video mixes male aggression with homoeroticism in its part fight, part dance portrayal of a boxing scene. [10] Gay Times called it "effortlessly cool" and felt the outfits channelled a "high-fashion kind of camp". [22] The music video for "Guyliner" was inspired by the fashion and makeup of scene kids in the 2000s. [33] [34]
Flamboyant was included on multiple critics' "best albums of 2019" lists, including Paper at number 5 [35] and Dazed at number 14. [36]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
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1. | "Mr. to You" |
| Robokid | 2:06 |
2. | "Career Boy" |
| Will Vaughan | 3:37 |
3. | "Daddy Like" |
|
| 2:55 |
4. | "Emasculate" |
| Robokid | 2:18 |
5. | "Man to Man" |
| Social Chair | 3:17 |
6. | "Musical Genius" |
| Brady | 1:55 |
7. | "Flamboyant" |
| ABSRDST | 3:16 |
8. | "Guyliner" |
| Socialchair | 2:55 |
9. | "Live by the Sword" |
| Brady | 2:31 |
10. | "Adam & Steve" |
|
| 3:01 |
11. | "Freaky 4 Life" |
| ABSRDST | 3:17 |
Total length: | 31:08 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
12. | "Tool for You" |
|
| 2:52 |
13. | "Under the Armor" |
| Robokid | 2:22 |
14. | "Guyliner, Pt. 2" |
| Brady | 2:45 |
15. | "Your Kinda Guy" |
| Diveo | 3:10 |
16. | "Adam & Steve" (Count Baldor Remix) |
| 3:13 | |
Total length: | 45:30 |
Region | Date | Format | Version | Label |
---|---|---|---|---|
Various | July 17, 2019 | Original | Self-released | |
January 17, 2020 |
| Deluxe | ||
May 1, 2020 | Streaming | Instrumentals | ||
May 14, 2020 | Streaming | Voice Memo | ||
April 2, 2021 | CD | Deluxe | ||