Sam Sparro (album)

Sam Sparro is the debut studio album by Australian recording artist Sam Sparro. It was released in the UK on 28 April 2008, after the success of Sparro's debut single, "Black and Gold", which peaked at number two on the UK Singles Chart. The album debuted at number five during its first week of release in the UK, and moved up one spot to number four, its current peak, in its second week of release. In September 2008 the nominees for the 2008 ARIA Awards with the album receiving two nominations including Best Male Artist and Breakthrough Artist – Album.[11]

Sam Sparro
Studio album by
Released28 April 2008 (2008-04-28)
Recorded2007–2008
Genre
Label
Producer
Sam Sparro chronology
Sam Sparro
(2008)
Return to Paradise
(2012)
Singles from Sam Sparro
  1. "Cottonmouth"
    Released: 10 June 2007[1]
  2. "Black and Gold"
    Released: 4 April 2008
  3. "Too Many Questions"
    Released: 21 June 2008 (NZ)[2]
  4. "21st Century Life"
    Released: 21 July 2008[3]
  5. "Pocket"
    Released: 13 December 2008 (AUS)[4]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[5]
101 Albums[6]
Digital Spy[7]
Drowned in Sound[8]
NME[9]
This Is Fake DIY[10]

Singles

  1. "Cottonmouth" was Sparro's first single from the album, released one year before the album, on 10 June 2007.[1]
  2. "Black and Gold" was the second single from the album, meant to act as a lead single for the album's release soon there after. The song went on to become a hit in the U.K., as well as in several other countries worldwide. It entered the UK Singles Chart at #23 and went on to peak at #2 for three non-consecutive weeks. The song also went on the peak at #4 in both Australia and Norway, #5 in Ireland, Europe, and Turkey, and #8 on the US Billboard Dance Charts.
  3. "Too Many Questions" was released in New Zealand, to the country's iTunes store on 21 June 2008.[2] It is unclear if the song was ever supposed to have been an international release or not, but if it was to have been, its release was cancelled.
  4. "21st Century Life" was the third single from the album to be released internationally (fourth single in New Zealand). It was not as successful as "Black and Gold", however, it peaked just outside the top 40 at #42 in Australia, and at #44 in the UK.
  5. "Pocket" was the fourth single (fifth single in New Zealand), as announced in an interview with Popjustice,[12] but its release was halted before it could reach the UK or US. However, it peaked at #33 on the Australian Airplay Chart. "Pocket" was released to iTunes in Australia on 13 December 2008.[4]

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Too Many Questions"Sam Sparro, Jesse RoggRichard X, Rogg3:56
2."Black and Gold"Sparro, RoggRogg, Sparro4:35
3."21st Century Life" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Sparro, RoggRogg, Paul Epworth4:21
4."Sick"Sparro, RoggRogg, Sparro4:08
5."Waiting for Time"Sparro, Eg WhiteWhite3:32
6."Recycle It!"SparroRogg1:17
7."Cottonmouth" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Sparro, RoggRogg, Sparro3:37
8."Hot Mess"Sparro, WhiteWhite3:01
9."Pocket"Sparro, EpworthEpworth4:45
10."Cut Me Loose"Sparro, RoggRogg, Sparro, Epworth[a]3:54
11."Sally"Sparro, RoggRichard X, Rogg, Sparro3:59
12."Clingwrap" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns) (track not included on various European editions of the album but is a standard track on original UK/AUS release)Sparro, RoggRogg, Sparro4:01
13."Can't Stop This" (features the hidden track "Still Hungry" which starts eight minutes in)Sparro, EpworthEpworth, Rogg[a]5:00/12:28
Total length:57:34
US version
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."S.A.M.S.P.A.R.R.O"Sam Falson2:33
2."Too Many Questions"Falson, Jesse Rogg3:56
3."Black and Gold"Falson, Rogg4:35
4."21st Century Life" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Falson, Rogg4:21
5."Sick"Falson, Rogg4:08
6."Waiting for Time"Falson, Eg White3:32
7."Recycle It!"Falson1:17
8."Cottonmouth" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Falson, Rogg3:37
9."Hot Mess"Falson, White3:01
10."Pocket"Falson, Paul Epworth4:45
11."Cut Me Loose"Falson, Rogg3:54
12."Sally"Falson, Rogg3:59
13."Clingwrap" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Falson, Rogg4:01
14."Still Hungry" (hidden track) 4:28
Total length:52:07
Japanese version
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Too Many Questions"Sam Sparro, Jesse Rogg 3:56
2."Black and Gold"Sparro, Rogg 4:35
3."21st Century Life" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Sparro, Rogg 4:21
4."Sick"Sparro, Rogg 4:08
5."Waiting for Time"Sparro, Eg White 3:32
6."Recycle It!"Sparro 1:17
7."Cottonmouth" (featuring the Sweet & Sour Horns)Sparro, Rogg 3:37
8."Hot Mess"Sparro, White 3:01
9."Pocket"Sparro, Paul Epworth 4:45
10."Cut Me Loose"Sparro, Rogg 3:54
11."Sally"Sparro, Rogg 3:59
12."Can't Stop This"Sparro, Epworth 5:03
13."Still Hungry" (Japanese bonus track)Sam Falson 4:26
14."S.A.M.S.P.A.R.R.O." (Japanese bonus track)FalsonRogg2:23
15."No End in Sight" (Japanese bonus track)Falson, RoggRichard X, Samuel Falson, Rogg3:55
16."Deep Down and Deep" (Japanese bonus track)Falson, RoggFalson, Rogg3:37
17."Black and Gold" (video)  3:40
18."21st Century Life" (video)  3:53
Total length:60:39
Notes
  • ^a signifies a co-producer

Personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Sam Sparro.

  • Davey Warf Rat Chegwidden – percussion
  • Richard Edgeler – mixing assistantance
  • Paul Epworth – production
  • Chris Falson[a] – guitar
  • James Bowen Falson[b] – guitar
  • Sam Falson/Sam Sparro – vocals, production, horn arrangements, instrumentation, keyboards
  • Adrian Gilliland – original cover photography
  • Dan Grech-Marugerat – mixing
  • Quetzal Guerrero – violin
  • Pete Hofman – mixing
  • Alex Hutchinson – layout designing
  • Alex Lake – photography
  • Stephen Marcussen – mastering
  • Mark Rankin – drum programming
  • Richard X – production
  • Jesse Rogg – production, mixing, engineering, horn arrangements
  • Todd M. Simon – engineering, trumpet, flugelhorn, horn arrangements
  • Brio Taliaferro – programming
  • Tracy Wannomae – alto saxophone, bass clarinet, flute, tenor saxophone
  • Jeremy Wheatley – mixing
  • Eg White – production, instrumentation
  • Charlie Willcocks – piano
  • Steven Wilson – illustration
Notes
  • ^a signifies person as Sparro's father
  • ^b signifies person as Sparro's brother

Chart performance

Weekly charts

Chart (2008) Peak
position
Australian Albums Chart[13] 23
Austrian Albums Chart[14] 59
Belgium Albums Chart (Flanders)[15] 94
Irish Albums Chart[14] 27
Italian Albums Chart[14] 94
UK Albums Chart[14] 4
US Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums[16] 9
US Billboard Heatseekers Albums[17] 16

Year-end charts

Chart (2008) Position
Australian Dance Albums Chart 21[18]

Certifications

Country Certification Sales
United Kingdom Gold[19] 100,000+

Awards and nominations

ARIA Music Awards[20]
Year Nominee / work Award Result
2008Sam SparroBest Male ArtistNominated
Breakthrough Artist – AlbumNominated

Release history

Region Date
United Kingdom 28 April 2008
Europe 6 June 2008
Australia 7 June 2008
United States 24 June 2008
Canada
Japan 1 October 2008

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 6 January 2014. Retrieved 5 January 2014.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  2. ""Too Many Questions" on New Zealand iTunes". iTunes. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  3. "Sam Sparro News". Archived from the original on 10 June 2008. Retrieved 29 May 2008.
  4. ""Pocket" on Australia iTunes". iTunes. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  5. Allmusic review
  6. 101 Albums review
  7. Digital Spy review
  8. Drowned in Sound review
  9. NME review
  10. This Is Fake DIY review
  11. Undercover 2008 ARIA Awards Nominees Announced... And Here They Are! Archived 20 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Accessed 6 October 2008
  12. Sam Sparro Interview
  13. "ARIA Top 50 Albums Chart".
  14. "Sam Sparro - Sam Sparro - Music Charts".
  15. "Sam Sparro - Sam Sparro".
  16. "Sam Sparro: Dance/Electronic Albums". Billboard. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  17. "Sam Sparro: Heatseekers Albums". Billboard. Retrieved 7 May 2014.
  18. "ARIA Charts - End Of Year Charts - Top 50 Dance Albums 2008". ARIA. Retrieved 5 January 2014.
  19. Certified Awards
  20. ARIA Awards History 2008.Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA). Retrieved 10 June 2012
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