Everything I Thought It Was
| Everything I Thought It Was | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | March 15, 2024 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 76:54 | |||
| Label | RCA | |||
| Producer |
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| Justin Timberlake chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Everything I Thought It Was | ||||
Everything I Thought It Was is the sixth studio album by American singer Justin Timberlake, released through RCA Records on March 15, 2024. A follow-up to his fifth album, Man of the Woods (2018), it includes guest appearances from Fireboy DML, Tobe Nwigwe, and Timberlake's band NSYNC. Timberlake, together with Danja, Federico Vindver, Calvin Harris, Timbaland, Louis Bell, Cirkut, Ryan Tedder, Rob Knox, and others, produced the record. The album's release was preceded by the release of the singles "Selfish", "No Angels", and "Drown".
Everything I Thought It Was debuted at number four on the US Billboard 200, giving Timberlake his sixth-consecutive US-top-five album, while the lead single, "Selfish", reached the top 20 of the Billboard Hot 100. The album reached the top five in several other countries, including Belgium, Germany, the Netherlands, Poland, Switzerland, and the United Kingdom. To promote Everything I Thought It Was, Timberlake embarked on his seventh concert tour, The Forget Tomorrow World Tour, in April 2024.
Background and composition
In 2023, Timberlake reunited with former members of his band, NSYNC, and released the single "Better Place" in support of the Trolls Band Together soundtrack,[1] and a collaboration with Timbaland and Nelly Furtado titled "Keep Going Up".[2] Timberlake had also collaborated with Romeo Santos on the song "Sin Fin",[3] with Jack Harlow on the song "Parent Trap" for Harlow's album Come Home the Kids Miss You,[4] a remix of Coco Jones' song "ICU",[5] and a further remix of the song "3D" by Jungkook.[6] Timberlake had also worked with Calvin Harris, producer of "Fuckin' Up the Disco" and "No Angels", alongside Pharrell Williams and Halsey, on Harris's song "Stay with Me".[7]
On January 19, 2024, after the release of the singles, Timberlake unveiled a trailer for an upcoming project titled Everything I Thought It Was, which was narrated by actor and Reptile co-star, Benicio del Toro.[8] Timberlake announced the album on January 25, alongside the release of the lead single, "Selfish".[9] Timberlake said Everything I Thought It Was has "incredibly honest" moments but is also "a lot of fucking fun".[10] He would call it his "most straightforward" record to date, referring to it as "complex within its simplicity".[11] In an interview with Zane Lowe for Apple Music's New Music Daily promotion, Timberlake said the album title was inspired when a friend, after listening to it, told him: "This sounds like everything I thought I wanted from you".[12] It is an R&B, hip-hop,[13] pop,[14] and nu-disco record.[15]
Release and promotion
After teasing a new project on social media in previous days, on January 19, 2024, Timberlake performed a free, one-night-only concert in Memphis, Tennessee, where he live-debuted his new single, "Selfish".[8] On January 25, Timberlake appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon; he announced the release of "Selfish" and said the album had taken four years to produce.[16] Timberlake appeared and performed on the January 27 episode of Saturday Night Live, singing "Selfish" and "Sanctified".[17] On January 30, he appeared on The Kelly Clarkson Show,[18] and the following day, his 43rd birthday, held a concert at Irving Plaza, New York City.[19]
On February 22, 2024, Timberlake performed "Selfish" on The Graham Norton Show.[20] The following day, due to an illness, he canceled his A One Night Only concert that was to be held that night at Roundhouse in London, UK.[21] Timberlake then appeared on Complex's show Sneaker Shopping on March 11, and mentioned the release of his new album at the end of the video.[22] On March 13, Timberlake performed a concert at the Wiltern in Los Angeles; the show included a surprise reunion with his NSYNC bandmates, who performed a medley of hits and the new album track "Paradise".[23] On March 15, Timberlake performed a half-hour session on NPR Music's series Tiny Desk.[24] He also announced the release of a documentary showing the album's creation process.[25] In April 2024, Timberlake opened the iHeartRadio Music Awards, performing "Selfish" and "No Angels".[26]
Singles
"Selfish" was released as the first single from Everything I Thought It Was on January 25, 2024, and its official music video premiered the same day.[27] The song debuted at number 19 on the US Billboard Hot 100, becoming his 39th solo-career entry on the Hot 100, and his 29th to reach the top 40.[28] In Canada, the track debuted and peaked at number 22 on the Canadian Hot 100.[29]
"No Angels" was released as the album's second single; an official music video was directed by Ti West and released on March 15, 2024.[30] He performed the single live on Jimmy Kimmel Live!.[31][32] Timberlake teased "Drown" in an Instagram post on February 19, 2024,[33] and released it as a promotional single on February 23.[34] "Drown" later impacted Italian radio as the album's third single.[35]
Tour
Timberlake promoted Everything I Thought It Was with The Forget Tomorrow World Tour, which began on April 29, 2024, in Vancouver, Canada.[36] The tour became Timberlake's fastest-selling to date, amassing over $140 million globally in initial ticket sales, with over one million expected attendees.[37] On February 23, 2024, Timberlake announced mid-2024 Europe tour dates.[38] On May 20, 2024, Pollstar announced nine additional shows were added due to "overwhelming demand".[39] The Forget Tomorrow World Tour received generally positive reviews.[40]
Critical reception
| Aggregate scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| AnyDecentMusic? | 4.6/10[41] |
| Metacritic | 51/100[42] |
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| AllMusic | [43] |
| Clash | 6/10[44] |
| The Guardian | [45] |
| Hot Press | 8/10[46] |
| The Independent | [47] |
| La Presse | 4.5/10[48] |
| MusicOMH | [49] |
| NME | [15] |
| Pitchfork | 4.9/10[50] |
| The Telegraph | [51] |
At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, Everything I Thought It Was received an average score of 51 based on 17 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[42] The review aggregator site AnyDecentMusic? compiled 13 reviews and gave Everything I Thought It Was an average of 4.6 out of 10, based on an assessment of the critical consensus.[41]
Frazier Tharpe of GQ gave Everything I Thought It Was a positive review; he wrote: "Timberlake brings grown-and-sexy back on Everything I Thought It Was. The NSYNC reunion will make headlines, but as usual, it's Timberlake and Timbaland for the win."[52] Steven J. Horowitz of Variety noted that for Timberlake, the album "feels like a stopgap on the road to Adult Contemporary — he's not at greatest-hits-tour status just yet, but it may not be far off".[14] Associated Press critic Maria Sherman stated: "In its better tracks ... Everything I Thought It Was is a return to form for the musician. In the moments when his immediately recognizable falsetto eases into a familiar kind of future funk, it works. In others, it feels like poorly timed nostalgia."[53]
Neil Z. Yeung of AllMusic gave Everything I Thought It Was three stars out of five, and said it is "at least better executed" than the "uneven" Man of the Woods and "on par" with The 20/20 Experience. He commented, "Some focus and editing would have really helped because there's a great album buried somewhere in here."[43] Robin Murray of Clash noted that it "can sometimes be forgettable across its 18-track largesse, while thematically it feels bunched around a cluster of feelings".[44] Writing for The Guardian, Laura Snapes said it "seems less like a straightforward comeback than a survival mission".[45] Pitchfork editor Owen Myers noted the album "is less of a faceplant than a comfortable rehash of past glories. [Timberlake] scales his stuttering electro and squelchy '80s funk into hollow, expensive-sounding maximalism."[50] Zach Schonfeld of Spin said it "presents a harder-edged JT, who tries a little of everything over 77 minutes but adds remarkably little to the pop landscape".[13]
Commercial performance
Everything I Thought It Was debuted at number four on the US Billboard 200, earning 67,000 album-equivalent units, calculated from 31.13 million on-demand streams and 41,000 pure album copies, and marking Timberlake's sixth-consecutive top-five album in the country.[54]
The album debuted at number five in Germany[55] and at number three in the Netherlands.[56] In the UK, Everything I Thought It Was debuted at number five on the UK Albums Chart.[57] It debuted at number one on the Album Downloads Chart[58] and at number 15 on the UK Vinyl Albums Chart.[59] In Australia, the album charted at number 23, becoming Timberlake's first album to peak outside the top ten in the country.[60]
Track listing
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Memphis" |
| 4:29 | |
| 2. | "Fuckin' Up the Disco" |
|
| 4:22 |
| 3. | "No Angels" |
|
| 3:28 |
| 4. | "Play" |
|
| 2:51 |
| 5. | "Technicolor" |
|
| 7:17 |
| 6. | "Drown" |
| 4:20 | |
| 7. | "Liar" (featuring Fireboy DML) |
|
| 3:26 |
| 8. | "Infinity Sex" |
|
| 3:49 |
| 9. | "Love & War" |
|
| 3:34 |
| 10. | "Sanctified" (featuring Tobe Nwigwe) |
|
| 5:11 |
| 11. | "My Favorite Drug" |
|
| 5:01 |
| 12. | "Flame" |
|
| 5:41 |
| 13. | "Imagination" |
|
| 3:16 |
| 14. | "What Lovers Do" |
|
| 3:42 |
| 15. | "Selfish" |
|
| 3:49 |
| 16. | "Alone" |
|
| 3:36 |
| 17. | "Paradise" (featuring *NSYNC) |
|
| 4:26 |
| 18. | "Conditions" |
|
| 4:36 |
| Total length: | 76:54 | |||
Notes
- ^[a] signifies a co-producer.
Credits and personnel
Credits are adapted from the album's liner notes.[61]
Musicians
- Justin Timberlake – vocals
- Elliot Ives – guitar (tracks 1, 3, 4, 8–10, 12, 14), bass (3)
- James Ford III – flugelhorn, trumpet (1, 9, 17)
- Raymond Monteiro – flugelhorn, trumpet (1, 9, 17)
- Robert Avallone – flugelhorn, trumpet (1, 9, 17)
- Fred Jackson – flute, saxophone (1, 9, 17)
- Keith Fiddmont – flute, saxophone (1, 9, 17)
- Leon Silva – flute, saxophone (1, 9, 17); tenor saxophone (13)
- Phillip Whack – flute, saxophone (1, 9, 17)
- Louis Van Taylor – saxophone (1, 9, 17)
- Kevin Williams – trombone (1, 9, 13, 17)
- Stephen Baxter – trombone (1, 9, 17)
- Wendell Kelly – trombone (1, 9, 17)
- Adam Blackstone – bass (tracks 4, 11, 13)
- Damien "Dammo" Farmer – bass (track 8)
- Chris Payton – guitar (tracks 13, 18)
- Larrance Dopson – keyboards (tracks 13, 18)
- Sean Erick – trumpet (track 13)
- Danja – piano (track 16)
- Kenyon Dixon – piano (track 16)
- Peter Lee Johnson – strings (track 16)
- *NSYNC – vocals (track 17)
Technical
- Randy Merrill – mastering
- Chris Godbey – mixing (all tracks), engineering (tracks 1–5, 7–10, 12, 14, 16, 17)
- Justin Timberlake – mixing
- Damien Lewis – engineering (tracks 1, 2, 4, 9, 10, 12, 14, 18)
- Louis Bell – engineering (tracks 6, 11, 13, 15)
Charts
| Chart (2024–2025) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums (ARIA)[60] | 23 |
| Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[62] | 7 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[63] | 3 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[64] | 6 |
| Canadian Albums (Billboard)[65] | 17 |
| Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[66] | 13 |
| Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[56] | 3 |
| French Albums (SNEP)[67] | 19 |
| German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[55] | 5 |
| Hungarian Physical Albums (MAHASZ)[68] | 20 |
| Irish Albums (OCC)[69] | 48 |
| Italian Albums (FIMI)[70] | 41 |
| Japanese Digital Albums (Oricon)[71] | 16 |
| Japanese Hot Albums (Billboard Japan)[72] | 47 |
| Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[73] | 44 |
| New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[74] | 25 |
| Polish Albums (ZPAV)[75] | 2 |
| Portuguese Albums (AFP)[76] | 23 |
| Scottish Albums (OCC)[77] | 12 |
| Spanish Albums (Promusicae)[78] | 24 |
| Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[79] | 37 |
| Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[80] | 5 |
| UK Albums (OCC)[57] | 5 |
| US Billboard 200[81] | 4 |
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