Guilty Pleasure | |
Type: | studio |
Artist: | Ashley Tisdale |
Cover: | Ashley Tisdale - Guilty Pleasure (Official Album Cover).png |
Border: | yes |
Recorded: | 2008–2009 |
Label: | Warner Bros. |
Producer: |
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Prev Title: | Headstrong |
Prev Year: | 2007 |
Next Title: | Symptoms |
Next Year: | 2019 |
Guilty Pleasure is the second studio album by American recording artist Ashley Tisdale. It was released on June 11, 2009, by Warner Bros. Records. The lead single from the album, "It's Alright, It's OK", was officially released in Canada on April 13, 2009.[1] The second single from Guilty Pleasure, "Crank It Up" was released on October 9, 2009, in Europe.
The album debuted at number 12 on the Billboard 200, selling 25,000 copies in its first week.[2]
In April 2008, she said that she has recorded a few songs for the album and she would fully focus on the album after filming High School Musical 3.[3] Tisdale has noted that the songs in the album have a message and a story that anyone can relate to,[4] and hoped to reveal her "edgier" side with more mature songs.[5] She also said the album was titled Guilty Pleasure because of her guilty pleasures.[6] Tisdale was involved in every aspect of the album's production.[7] Tisdale's music inspirations for the album include Katy Perry and Pat Benatar.[8] The song "Switch" is also featured in the motion picture Aliens in the Attic, which Tisdale starred in.
Warner Bros. said the first component of the label's album roll out was revealing Tisdale's new look with a relaunch of her web site in March and the cover of Cosmopolitans April issue. "We wanted to create a conversation and then follow quickly with the music," he said.[9] The album was to be released on June 16, 2009 in North America, but it was pushed back to July 28, 2009, although it[10] was released a month before, on June 12, 2009 in several countries such as Germany, Italy and Spain.[11] The album's release date in the US and Canada was preceded by an exclusive "Countdown to Guilty Pleasure" on iTunes for the U.S. and Canada, on which "Overrated", "What If" and "Acting Out" had promotional releases in each week.[12] The first two songs debuted on the Billboard Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles chart due to digital downloads at number three and number one, respectively.[13]
The first single, "It's Alright, It's OK", Tisdale said, "is a strong, empowering song that kind of helps you move on" and continued to say: I have definitely on and with someone you really like, if they are cheating on you, you don't want to believe it. But, unfortunately, you either stay in the relationship and keep getting hurt because it keeps happening or you get up and you move on. You don't look back. Tisdale said the song "Hot Mess" is "about hanging out with a motorcycle bad boy that makes life more interesting" and the song "How Do You Love Someone", written by Porcelain Black, is "about a girl who deals with the split of her parents".[14] Tisdale said the song could also be about "when you have been cheated on or you're in a relationship".[15] Black was initially reluctant to let Tisdale record the song, but eventually green-lit the track; however, she also recorded her own version, produced by RedOne.[16] Tisdale co-wrote several songs on the album such as "What If", which was co-written with Kara DioGuardi. Tisdale described "What If" as the most personal song on the album, and said the song "is about when you’re in a relationship and you say 'If I really needed you, would you actually be there?’"[17] "Time's Up" it was first recorded by American pop singer Katy Perry, for her second album One of the Boys (2008), though it was never included for the album and was passed on to Tisdale.
Following its release, Guilty Pleasure generated mixed reviews from critics and has a 48 out of 100 on Metacritic, based on six critical reviews.[18] The most positive of reviews came from Allmusic's Stephen Erlewine, who gave the album three and a half stars out of five, stating that when Tisdale "sticks to the surface, she makes sure that Guilty Pleasure lives up to its title". The ballads however, were not as well received, stating Tisdale "isn't convincing when she tries to deal in either pain or carnality".[19] Billboard gave the album a mixed review with four and a half stars out of ten, stating Tisdale "can deliver the radio-ready goods" but criticized the album as a whole and that it "doesn't give the singer room to comfortably let loose".[20] Digital Spy's Nick Levine praised Guilty Pleasure for Tisdale's new sound, comparing her to the likes of Kelly Clarkson and Ashlee Simpson. Levine praised tracks such as "It's Alright, It's OK", "Erase and Rewind" and "Hot Mess", however was not impressed with "Crank It Up", stating it "shamelessly rips off Britney's robopop sound, right down to the Spears-aping vocals"; he went on to give the album three out of five stars.[21] The most negative of reviews came from Margaret Wappler of the Los Angeles Times who only gave the album one and a half out of four stars. Wappler said the album has "few glimmers of hope" and went on to criticize the producers as "not seem[ing] to have gifted Tisdale with their best work".
The album debuted on several European charts, the first appearances of the album were in the last week of June 2009, on Austrian Albums Chart and German Albums Chart, peaking at number seven and nine respectively, in the same week the album debuted at number 51 on Irish Albums Chart and rose to number 30 in the following week while in Spain, the album debuted at number 21 and rose to number nine in the second week. In the first week on August 2009, the album debuted at number 12 on the Billboard 200 selling 25,000 copies in its first week.[2] The album dropped out of the Billboard 200 after eight weeks on the chart. The album had sold 245,000 copies in the United States as of December 9, 2010.
Tisdale embarked on a press European promo tour in March 2009, where she visited the United Kingdom, France,[22] Germany,[23] and Italy. Tisdale started a promo radio tour in May 2009 for United States.[24] On April 14, 2009, she was presenting the lead single of the album on On Air with Ryan Seacrest,[25] one month later she performed for first time a few songs from the album at the 2009 KISS Concert on May 17, 2009.[26] The music video of "It's Alright, It's OK" was shown in 6,600 movie theatres in the United States. In early June 2009, she started her second promotional tour for Europe, visiting Germany, Italy and Spain, here performed on several television shows, such as German Wetten, dass..? and Comet Awards, Spanish Fama and Operación Triunfo, and Italian TRL.[27] [28] [29] [30] Her first performance in the American television was on June 16, 2009, performing the first single and "Masquerade" on Good Morning America,[31] later Tisdale and her band promoted the album on several American television shows including Today Show and America's Got Talent.[32] [33] Tisdale along with her band performed several free concerts across the United States, including the opening for the first Microsoft Store on Scottsdale, Arizona, on October 22, 2009. Later in the month she performed "It's Alright, It's OK" at the MTV Latin Video Music Awards held in Mexico. She also performed songs from Guilty Pleasure and recorded live performances for AOL Sessions and Walmart Soundcheck, the last being released as a digital Extended Play on August 4, 2009.[34] [35]
"It's Alright, It's OK" was released as the album's lead single on April 13, 2009 in Canada, and in the United States on the next day, in both radio airplay and digital download formats. The single debuted at #99 on the Billboard Hot 100 in the same week, making it Tisdale's lowest-charting official single on the chart.[36] The song's highest peak position was #5 on the Austrian Singles Chart.
"Crank It Up" was released on October 9, 2009, as the album's second and final international single. The music video premiered on October 5, 2009, via VIVA and was featured on MySpace on October 6, 2009.
"Masquerade", "Overrated", "Acting Out" and "What If" were released as part of the Guilty Pleasure countdown on iTunes. “What If” and “Overrated” debuted at numbers 1 and 3 on the Bubbling Under Hot 100 Singles, respectively.
Notes
Country | Date | Label | Format(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Spain | June 11, 2009 | Warner Music | CD |
Germany | June 12, 2009 | CD/CD+DVD | |
Italy | CD | ||
Brazil | |||
Slovakia | |||
Israel | |||
Netherlands | June 15, 2009 | ||
United Kingdom | |||
Denmark | |||
France | |||
Hong Kong | June 16, 2009 | ||
Poland | June 22, 2009 | ||
Chile | June 30, 2009 | ||
Taiwan | June 30, 2009 | ||
New Zealand | July 6, 2009 | ||
Japan | July 8, 2009 | ||
Canada | July 28, 2009 | CD CD+DVD Limited edition | |
United States | |||
Mexico | August 11, 2009 | CD | |
Australia | January 18, 2010 | Digital download |