Grand Romantic Explained

Grand Romantic
Type:studio
Artist:Nate Ruess
Cover:Grand Romantic by Nate Ruess.jpg
Alt:A man surrounded by a skull, mask, and roses while holding a bunch of different colored balloons.
Genre:
Length:46:17
Label:Fueled by Ramen
Producer:Jeff Bhasker

Grand Romantic is the debut studio album of Nate Ruess, lead vocalist from The Format and Fun. It was released on June 16, 2015, by Fueled by Ramen. The album was produced by Some Nights producer Jeff Bhasker. Following the hiatus of Fun, Ruess announced that he would be working on material for a solo project.[1]

The album received a generally positive reception, however critics noted that it was overly theatrical in terms of production, lyricism and vocal delivery. Grand Romantic debuted at number 7 on the Billboard 200 and spawned four singles: "Nothing Without Love", "AhHa", "Great Big Storm" and "What This World Is Coming To".

Promotion

On June 10, the album was made available for streaming on the MTV website.[2] Later the same day, the "AhHa" visualizer video was released.[3]

Critical reception

Grand Romantic received positive reviews but music critics were divided over Ruess' musical vision in terms of production, lyrics and performance. At Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream critics, the album received an average score of 61, based on 10 reviews.

Awarding the album four of five stars, Jack Appleby of Alternative Press wrote that "Grand Romantic is proof-positive more Nate Ruess is always a good thing." Jon Dolan of Rolling Stone was positive towards the album's theatrical production and upbeat optimism, saying that, "Fun. co-producers Jeff Bhasker and Emile Haynie help Ruess create richly orchestrated bombast with the right amount of sonic wanderlust." Matt Collar of AllMusic praised the collaboration of Ruess, Bhasker and Haynie for creating a project that embraces the concept of love, calling it "a fittingly grandiose, occasionally silly, passionately effusive, and ultimately very catchy album."

Annie Zaleski of The A.V. Club saw potential in the album's themes but said that it was brought down by subdued production and lyrical content with neither depth or conflict in its romantic tales, concluding that "Grand Romantic often feels so preoccupied with grandiose gestures that it loses sight of the little details that in the past have made Ruess’ music so memorable." Alfred Soto of Spin criticized Ruess for his inability to tone down his singing style or deliver songs that stood out on the album. Jim Farber of the New York Daily News compared the album negatively to Adam Lambert's The Original High saying that while both are musically similar, Lambert's voice performs campy theatrics better than Ruess' unsubtle delivery, saying that "[T]here's no roundness, or richness, to his tone. It's all hard angles, offering no cushion for the screech."

Film

Alongside the release of this album, The Grand Romantic, a 28-minute short film starring Nate Ruess was also released. It features a number of songs from this album.

Personnel

Adapted from the Grand Romantic liner notes.[4]

Charts

Chart performance for Grand Romantic! Chart (2015)! Peak
position

External links

Notes and References

  1. Montgomery. James. Nate Ruess on Going Solo and the Future of fun.. October 24, 2015. Rolling Stone. Wenner Media. February 6, 2015.
  2. Web site: Nate Ruess. https://web.archive.org/web/20130611083300/http://www.mtv.com/artists/nate-ruess. dead. June 11, 2013. MTV. June 10, 2015.
  3. Web site: Fun's frontman Nate Ruess drops wild video for emotional monster 'AhHa'. Brian Anthony Hernandez. June 10, 2015. Mashable. June 10, 2015.
  4. Grand Romantic. Nate Ruess. 2015. Fueled by Ramen. booklet. 2-550630.