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Good Karma
Good Karma
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Good Karma
Studio album by
Released3 June 2016 (2016-06-03)
RecordedMay 2014 – February 2016
Studio
GenreElectronic
Length38:09
Label
Producer
Roxette chronology
The RoxBox!
(2015)
Good Karma
(2016)
Bag of Trix
(2020)
Singles from Good Karma
  1. "It Just Happens"
    Released: 8 April 2016 (2016-04-08)
  2. "Some Other Summer"
    Released: 17 June 2016 (2016-06-17)
  3. "Why Don't You Bring Me Flowers?"
    Released: 4 November 2016 (2016-11-04)

Good Karma is the tenth studio album by Roxette, a Swedish pop rock duo consisting of Marie Fredriksson and Per Gessle. Released on 3 June 2016 by Roxette Recordings and Parlophone, it was the only album issued by the duo under an international recording contract signed with Parlophone's parent company Warner Music Group. The album was produced by Gessle alongside Christoffer Lundquist and Clarence Öfwerman, with co-production on several tracks by Addeboy vs. Cliff, among others.

Good Karma was recorded over a period of nearly two years, with its recording frequently interrupted by The Neverending World Tour. The tour ran from 2009 until the beginning of 2016, when Fredriksson was advised by her doctors to cease all touring activity due to poor health. The album is more electronic than the duo's previous releases, with Gessle saying he was inspired by the thought of not having to perform the songs live, choosing instead to focus on creating more electronic and complicated compositions.

A Sebastien Drums remix of "Some Other Summer" preceded the release of Good Karma by several months, being followed by the lead single "It Just Happens" on 8 April 2016. EPs were issued for subsequent singles "Some Other Summer" and "Why Don't You Bring Me Flowers?" on 17 June and 4 November 2016, respectively. A fan-made video for the Roxette version of "Some Other Summer" became a viral hit after it was publicised via Roxette's social media accounts. The video proved controversial in Poland, with the couple who created it receiving death threats.

The album received mostly positive reviews from music critics, with a number of them praising Gessle's songwriting and Fredriksson's vocal performance, and describing it as a fitting end to Roxette's career. However, others complained about the overtly electronic production. The album also performed well commercially, debuting at number one in the Czech Republic as well as number two in Switzerland and the duo's native Sweden, and was their highest-charting studio album since the 1990s in both Australia and the United Kingdom.

Background and recording

[edit]

Good Karma features production contributions from Swedish duo Addeboy vs. Cliff, with whom Roxette had collaborated on a 2015 remix of "The Look". Roxette songwriter Per Gessle said he sought to integrate an additional musician or collaborator into every album he released, explaining this was done "just to make everyone – myself included – stand on our toes. I always welcome change if it's [for] the right reason." He noted in the case of Good Karma that "new blood definitely needed to be injected everywhere", but said the album would be produced by him alongside regular contributors Clarence Öfwerman and Christoffer Lundquist.[1] "The Look (2015 Remake)" was used by a Swedish fashion company in a prominent advertising campaign during the Autumn of 2015, with Gessle saying Roxette was collaborating with numerous producers and remixers for their upcoming studio album,[2] indicating a new single would be released before the end of the year.[1] A remix of new Roxette track "Some Other Summer" – created by French producer Sebastien Drums – was released on 6 November 2015 along with a music video.[3][4]

Per Gessle (left) and Marie Fredriksson (right) photographed in 2014, the same year they began recording Good Karma.

Gessle said he wanted Good Karma to sound like an updated album that leaned toward a "classic Roxette tradition",[5] elaborating: "[W]e wanted to combine our classic Roxette sound with a modern and slightly unpredictable production to create a soundscape where you would both recognise our sound and find something new."[6] The album is more electronic than the duo's previous releases. Gessle said he began work on it knowing the material would never be performed live, a situation he found inspiring, as he could create elaborate electronic tracks in the studio instead of focusing on how the songs would translate to a live, guitar-orientated setting.[7] Lead singer Marie Fredriksson's brain tumour diagnosis in 2002 made it difficult for her to memorise the lyrics to new songs, so The Neverending World Tour consisted primarily of Roxette's greatest hits.[8] The tour began with the band's performances at the 2009 edition of the Night of the Proms festival.[9]

Good Karma was recorded over a period of nearly two years; Gessle said recording was frequently disrupted by the duo's touring schedule.[7] Unlike previous albums Charm School (2011) and Travelling (2012) – which both made usage of old ideas – Gessle confirmed every song on Good Karma was written specifically for the album, saying it became a "more cohesive production" as a result.[5] Despite this, album closer "April Clouds" is based on the lyric "Wish You the Best", a song from Gessle's 1997 solo album The World According to Gessle.[10][11] Two outtakes from Good Karma were issued as singles from Roxette's 2020 compilation Bag of Trix—"Let Your Heart Dance with Me" and "Piece of Cake".[12][13]

Release and artwork

[edit]

"It Just Happens" was released as the lead single from Good Karma on 8 April 2016, the duo's first release under a new deal signed with Warner Music Group.[6] Its music video was directed by Tobias Leo Nordquist and released on 20 May.[14] The cover artwork for the album was designed to mimic the imagery of a butterfly.[15] Good Karma was released on 3 June 2016,[16] with a limited edition translucent orange-coloured vinyl being issued as Roxette's final studio album.[17][18] The release was timed to coincide with the scheduled opening concert of the final leg of The Neverending World Tour in 2016. This final leg was cancelled after Fredriksson was advised by her doctors to stop touring due to poor health.[19] Fredriksson sent a thank you message to fans for their kind wishes, in which she said: "Sadly, now my touring days are over and I want to take this opportunity to thank our wonderful fans that [have] followed us on our long and winding journey." She said she looked forward to the release of Good Karma, describing it as "our best album ever."[20] She died in 2019 due to complications stemming from her brain tumour diagnosis in 2002.[21][22]

An EP for the album's second single, "Some Other Summer", was released on 17 June 2016.[23] An official music video was not created for the original version of the song; instead a lyric video was uploaded to YouTube on 29 June.[24] A fan-made video for the track became a viral hit after Roxette shared it via their official social media accounts.[25][26] The video proved controversial in Poland, with the couple who created it receiving death threats.[27][28] An EP of "Why Don't You Bring Me Flowers?" was released as the third and final single from the album on 4 November 2016, containing an exclusive single remix of the song created by Addeboy vs. Cliff.[29] A music video for the song was created using footage uploaded by fans to Roxette's official website as part of a contest.[30][31] The video was inspired by and contains footage from the Polish couple who created the video to "Some Other Summer".[32] Marie and Per expressed regret over the "wave of criticism" the couple received in Poland.[33]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AftonbladetStarStarStar[34]
AllMusicStarStarStar[35]
ExpressenStarStarStar[5]
GaffaStarStarStar[36]
Göteborgs-PostenStarStar[37]
laut.deStarStarStar[38]
Renowned for SoundStarStarStarStarStar[39]
The MusicStarStarStar[40]
StuffStarStar[41]
Upsala Nya TidningStarStarStarStarStar[42]

Good Karma was met with mostly positive reviews from music critics. A writer for Upsala Nya Tidning praised the production, which they said contains "a certain retro feeling [...] but also features the ethereal and dreamy sound of some of Gessle's solo records (with echoes of Cocteau Twins)". The writer complimented it for containing "smart choruses and nice details from pop history", before concluding that if Good Karma was their final record, Roxette were ending with "their flag flying high".[42] Brendon Veevers of Renowned for Sound gave a glowing review, saying it contains some of the best material Roxette released in the latter part of their career.[39] Writing for Cryptic Rock, Alfie Vera Mella described the album as being a "perfect" release to celebrate the duo's 30th anniversary,[16] while Tyler McLoughlan of The Music praised Gessle's songwriting for an abundance of hooks.[40]

The staff of Mittelbayerische Zeitung rated the album "impressive", praising "Why Dontcha?" and "From a Distance",[43] while laut.de writer Kai Butterweck said: "Good Karma isn't a record that will change the pop world, but a solid nod to the past." He elaborated by stating that "Marie and Per pop their way through their own archive quite solidly". Despite this, Butterweck said "A little less synthetics in the sound would have done the album good. But by and large, Roxette still sound like Roxette in 2016."[38] Similarly, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of AllMusic complimented the album for an increase in tempo as compared to the rest of their later work, but said on Good Karma the duo "deliberately excise the fizziness that fueled their big hits all in a conscious attempt to play toward their middle age. In that regard, Good Karma is a success—it's a mature Roxette album that doesn't disavow their past—but it's hard not to miss the bubblegum Euro style of Look Sharp!"[35]

The record received some mixed reviews as well. Nils Hansson of Dagens Nyheter said Gessle and the producers sought to appeal too much to young Electropop fans, "with digital loops, EDM beats, autotune voice and rave synths". Hansson additionally complained Fredriksson did not contribute vocals to more songs.[44] Gaffa reviewer Jesper Robild argued Roxette initially found success as a result of their songwriting talent and criticized the amount of producers credited, saying: "More people than usual are involved, and Good Karma is obviously coloured by today's pop and dance music. Gone are all the interesting distorted guitars and drums, replaced by new elements such as electronic beats, Auto-Tune/vocoder and similar unbecoming ingredients." Despite this, he praised Fredriksson's performance and said the album would have sounded better with more organic instrumentation.[36] Stuff writer Hannah McKee said Good Karma plays like a "jumbled archive of pop music from the '80s, '90s and '00s, jam-packed with as many different pop trends as possible", but went on to compliment Fredriksson's vocals, saying her voice is at times reminiscent of her performance on "It Must Have Been Love" (1990). She described "April Clouds" as "the most emotionally invested" song on the record.[41]

Although the staff of Göteborgs-Posten also gave the record a mixed review, they too praised Fredriksson's performance, saying the album is best when the tempo "slows down" and she takes "center-stage" on the ballads such as "April Clouds". They dubbed the song the "finest" track on the album, describing it as what "in perfect balance manages to combine Per and Marie's love for the early American and Swedish 70's sound that made Roxette something out of the ordinary [in the first place]."[37] Other publications that commented on "April Clouds" included Expressen, with Anders Nunstedt dubbing it one of the album's best tracks,[5] while Markus Larsson of Sweden's biggest newspaper Aftonbladet said the song acts as a "beautiful goodbye" if this is their final record.[34]

Commercial performance

[edit]

Good Karma peaked at number two in the duo's native Sweden, held off the top spot by Volbeat's Seal the Deal & Let's Boogie.[45] The album debuted atop the Czech Albums Chart, standing as their first number one in the country since Charm School in 2011.[46] Good Karma debuted at number two in Switzerland, where it was held off the top spot by Seal the Deal & Let's Boogie.[47] It also made the top 10 in Austria, Hungary and Spain.[48][49][50] In Germany, Good Karma debuted at number 11, making it Roxette's first release since their second studio album Look Sharp! (1988) in 1989 to peak outside the top 10 of the German Albums Chart.[51] The album performed poorly in Denmark, where it debuted at number 52 with sales of just 168 copies.[52]

Good Karma became the first Roxette studio album to enter the top 100 in the United Kingdom since 1999's Have a Nice Day, debuting at number 61 on the UK Albums Chart with first week sales of 1,682 copies.[53] It attained a higher peak position on the Scottish Albums Chart, debuting at number 44.[54] In Australia, the album entered and peaked at number 25,[55] the duo's highest placement there for a studio album since Crash! Boom! Bang! in 1994.[56]

Track listing

[edit]

All lyrics are written by Per Gessle; all music is composed by Gessle, except where noted.[17]

Good Karma track listing
No.TitleMusicProducer(s)Length
1."Why Dontcha?" 2:46
2."It Just Happens" 
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:46
3."Good Karma"
  • Andreas Broberger
  • Gessle
  • Hannes Lindgren
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:19
4."This One" 
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:12
5."You Make It Sound So Simple"
  • Broberger
  • Gessle
  • Lindgren
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
  • Addeboy vs. Cliff[a]
3:42
6."From a Distance" 
  • Addeboy vs. Cliff
  • Lundquist[b]
  • Gessle[b]
3:31
7."Some Other Summer" 
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:09
8."Why Don't You Bring Me Flowers?" 
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:32
9."You Can't Do This to Me Anymore"
  • Gessle
  • Mats Persson
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
  • Addeboy vs. Cliff[a]
3:50
10."20 BPM"
  • Broberger
  • Gessle
  • Lindgren
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
  • Addeboy vs. Cliff[a]
3:48
11."April Clouds" 
  • Lundquist
  • Öfwerman
  • Gessle
3:30

Notes

  • ^[a] signifies backing track production
  • ^[b] signifies a co-producer

Personnel

[edit]

Credits adapted from the liner notes of Good Karma.[17]

Musicians and technical personnel

  • Addeboy vs. Cliff – engineering (at GB17), programming and production (tracks 5, 6, 9 and 10 only)
  • Emmelie Åslin – photography
  • Marie Dimberg – management
  • Viktor Flumé – photography
  • Wickholm Formavd – design
  • Marie Fredriksson – lead and background vocals
  • Per Gessle – lead and background vocals and production
  • Christoffer Lundquist – background vocals, engineering (at Aerosol Grey Machine and Studio Vinden), programming, production and mixing
  • Helena Josefsson – background vocals
  • Clarence Öfwerman – production
  • Mats "M.P." Persson – engineering (at Tits & Ass Studio)

Charts

[edit]
Weekly chart performance for Good Karma
Chart (2016) Peak
position
Australian Albums (ARIA)[56] 25
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[48] 10
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[57] 18
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[58] 50
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[59] 1
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[52] 52
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[60] 36
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[61] 20
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[51] 11
Greek Albums (IFPI)[62] 69
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[49] 6
Italian Albums (FIMI)[63] 90
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[64] 29
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[65] 36
Scottish Albums (OCC)[54] 44
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[50] 10
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[66] 2
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[67] 2
UK Albums (OCC)[68] 61

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
is the tenth studio album by the Swedish pop rock duo Roxette, formed by Per Gessle and Marie Fredriksson, released on 3 June 2016 by Cosmos Music. The record, primarily produced by Gessle with Christoffer Lundquist and Clarence Öfwerman, comprises eleven original songs blending synth-pop elements with the band's signature melodic hooks. Issued after the 2011 album Charm School, it arrived amid Fredriksson's prolonged recovery from a 2002 brain tumour that had severely limited touring and recording capabilities, yet enabled this vibrant return to form. Debuting at number two on the Swedish Albums Chart and supported by the lead single "It Just Happens", the album received praise for its energetic tracks and Fredriksson's resilient vocals, though some reviewers critiqued uneven songwriting and dated production choices. As Roxette's final studio effort before Fredriksson's death in 2019, Good Karma underscored the duo's enduring pop craftsmanship despite physical adversities.

Production

Background and recording

Roxette's work on Good Karma, their tenth studio album, followed the duo's reunion and return to touring after Marie Fredriksson's recovery from a 2002 diagnosis, which had sidelined for nearly a decade. , the primary songwriter, initiated the project amid ongoing international tours that resumed in 2010, building on the momentum from their 2012 album Charm School. The conception emphasized recapturing the band's pop-rock energy while adapting to Fredriksson's health constraints, with Gessle handling most instrumental and production duties. Recording sessions spanned approximately two years, from around 2014 to 2015, and were frequently interrupted by the demands of The Neverending World Tour, which continued through this period. The bulk of the work occurred in Swedish studios, including Tits & Ass Studio in , The Aerosol Grey Machine in Vallarum, and others, focusing on layered production techniques to achieve clarity and dynamism in the sound. Fredriksson's participation was limited primarily to vocal takes due to physical challenges stemming from her neurological condition, requiring extended technical adjustments and time for her contributions, which added to the process's duration and intensity. The album was produced by Gessle in collaboration with longtime associates Christoffer Lundquist and Clarence Öfwerman, who contributed to engineering and instrumentation for a polished pop-rock aesthetic. Swedish production duo Addeboy vs. Cliff provided co-production and co-writing on four tracks, including the title song, injecting modern electronic elements while preserving the core sound. This team approach addressed logistical hurdles, with Gessle overseeing demos and arrangements before integrating Fredriksson's vocals.

Songwriting and influences

Per Gessle composed the lyrics and primary melodies for all 11 tracks on Good Karma, the shortest album at 38 minutes, through an iterative process involving advanced demos and refinements before sharing with collaborators. Songs often started with lyrics written years earlier, paired with newly developed music, allowing melodies to evolve based on production needs rather than spontaneous inspiration. Gessle emphasized patience in this workflow, as remote collaboration and technical revisions extended timelines, with each track requiring multiple passes for structural and sonic adjustments. Collaborators contributed instrumental foundations, particularly Addeboy vs. Cliff, who supplied unfinished tracks and loops via exchanges; Gessle adapted these, retaining significant portions for songs like the title track, which originated from their archives. He also worked with Mats MP Persson on tracks such as "You Can't Do This to Me Anymore," marking their first joint effort in years, though additional co-written material remained unused. Christoffer Lundquist handled programming and engineering, while Clarence Öfwerman provided production input, including acoustic elements echoing prior work. Gessle acknowledged limitations in solo melody creation, stating certain tracks aligned with his style only through these external inputs. The album's sound drew from 1980s electronic influences, including synth elements reminiscent of and , integrated via collaborators' contributions that also incorporated gothic textures akin to . Gessle sought to update his established pop approach with modern techniques and non-organic sounds, avoiding vintage emulation in favor of complex, digitally driven arrangements not optimized for live replication. Marie Fredriksson's constraints, restricting her to vocal recordings, further shaped the process toward remote, producer-led iterations rather than in-studio jamming.

Release and promotion

Release and artwork

Good Karma was released on June 3, 2016, by Recordings under exclusive license to , marking the duo's only album under this international . The release encompassed digital download, standard , and vinyl formats, with a limited edition translucent orange-colored vinyl produced as part of the initial rollout. Physical editions were distributed through subsidiaries in various territories, including and . The album's packaging featured a vibrant cover , with promotional materials distributed via press kits in advance of the launch. This artwork aligned with the album's thematic elements, emphasizing renewal through its visual motifs.

Singles and marketing

"It Just Happens" was released as the from Good Karma on April 8, 2016, approximately two months prior to the album's launch, with an accompanying premiering on May 18, 2016. Warner Music selected the track for its powerful ballad structure, aligning with established conventions to generate pre-release anticipation through radio airplay and digital platforms. "Some Other Summer" followed as the second single on June 17, 2016, supported by a lyric video to extend visibility in the immediate post-release period. The third single, "Why Don't You Bring Me Flowers?", emerged on November 4, 2016, targeting sustained fan engagement later in the year. These staggered releases facilitated targeted media pushes, including online streaming and video content, which Warner's promotional efforts amplified to maintain momentum without extensive physical distribution. Marketing emphasized the album's optimistic tone and the duo's enduring pop-rock identity, with Warner coordinating global digital rollout and press to leverage Roxette's legacy fanbase. indicated the campaign lacked rigid strategies, focusing instead on authentic song selection to drive organic radio and streaming uptake, resulting in heightened online buzz preceding physical sales.

Music and themes

Musical style and composition

Good Karma exhibits a predominant pop-rock style augmented by electronic elements, characterized by meticulous production that layers synths, keyboards, and programmed beats with traditional guitars and bass. The album comprises 11 tracks with an average duration of approximately 3.5 minutes, yielding a total runtime of 38 minutes, facilitating a compact structure suited to contemporary listening formats. Production techniques emphasize electronic programming for rhythmic foundations, as in the use of bassy thumps and pulsating synths, while incorporating live instrumentation such as real drums in ballads and occasional acoustic elements for textural contrast. This approach, handled by producers Per Gessle, Christoffer Lundquist, Clarence Öfwerman, and Addeboy vs. Cliff, marks a causal shift from the duo's earlier organic rock-oriented works toward a modern electronica-infused sound, motivated by a desire to inject freshness without reliance on live band dynamics. Track variations highlight structural diversity within the pop-rock framework: upbeat anthems like the opener "Why Dontcha?" employ fast tempos, airy synth intros, and saxophone solos for energetic propulsion, while the title track "Good Karma" builds from piano riffs to stadium-scale rockers with danceable 123 BPM rhythms in the key of C major. Mid-tempo EDM-influenced pieces, such as "This One" and "You Make It Sound So Simple," feature prominent phat bass lines, soaring keyboard-driven choruses, and electronic symphonies, contrasting with slower ballads like "April Clouds" that utilize gentle piano, tambourine, strings, and unfiltered vocals for introspective closure. Electronic vocal filters appear selectively, enhancing production depth without pervasive auto-tune, while elements like cowbells and chunky beats in "20 BPM" underscore rhythmic experimentation. Overall, these compositional choices evolve Roxette's signature melodic hooks by integrating '80s-inspired electronic touches with rock instrumentation, prioritizing precision over vintage warmth.

Lyrics and conceptual elements

The lyrics of Good Karma, primarily authored by , emphasize motifs of relational flux, introspective solitude, and the invocation of favorable outcomes, often structured in verse-chorus formats that build tension through personal anecdotes before resolving in anthemic pleas or realizations. The title track "Good Karma" opens with of liminal states—"You're on a ship with the wind and the sun / And you close just one eye / 'Cause you're not really sure if you wanna be alone"—escalating to a repeated chorus beseeching "Good karma, good karma / come to me," which frames in human connections as a cycle amenable to positive reciprocity. Similar patterns appear in "It Just Happens," where verses detail serendipitous encounters leading to a chorus affirming emotional inevitability, underscoring relationships as emergent forces rather than deliberate choices. Self-discovery motifs recur through observational reflections on change amid continuity, as Gessle described his : "I change a lot but I still stay the same," evident in tracks like "" that evoke detached contemplation of life's distances and losses. "April Clouds" extends this with lyrics bidding "I wish you the best," structured as a somber verse progression to a resigned chorus, linking personal evolution to relational closures potentially informed by the duo's real-world and interruptions. Fame's burdens surface indirectly in lyrical nods to against , paralleling Gessle's observations on algorithmic barriers limiting exposure for veteran acts like . Conceptually, the album coheres around a of consequential cycles—actions in partnerships and pursuits yielding returns—without prescriptive , as seen in updated temporal references like "2015" or "2016" in "," anchoring abstract karma to verifiable contemporaneous events in Gessle's output and the band's dynamics post-hiatus. Songs such as "Why Don’t You Bring Me Flowers?" illustrate this through verses cataloging relational —"Why don't you bring me flowers anymore?"—contrasted with hopeful choruses, evoking equilibrium restored via reflective agency rather than fate alone.

Reception and analysis

Critical reception

Critical reception of Roxette's Good Karma was generally mixed to positive, with reviewers praising the album's polished production, Marie Fredriksson's vocals, and catchy elements in select tracks, while critiquing its departure from the duo's earlier high-energy pop sound in favor of a more mature, subdued approach. In a review for , described the record as featuring "hooks, dynamics, and faster beats" on the title track and experimental touches like vocoders on "20 bpm," but noted that it "mostly plays like big, polished power ballads" and "feels soft" compared to the "bubblegum Euro style" of albums like Look Sharp!. Reviewers highlighted the catchiness of individual songs, such as the "toe-tapping" opener "Why Don’tcha?" and the EDM-influenced "It Just Happens," crediting the album's cohesive blend of pop and rock with strong production values. Cryptic Rock awarded it 4 out of 5 stars, commending its celebration of Roxette's legacy through diverse styles including sensual ballads and homages, with standout tracks like "Some Other Summer" and the haunting "April Clouds." Renowned for Sound echoed this, emphasizing Fredriksson's "powerful vocals" and the emotional depth in tracks like "From A Distance," positioning Good Karma as an engaging return despite its formulaic pop structure. Some outlets pointed to the album's formulaic tendencies as a weakness, with aggregate sites like Album of the Year reflecting a 60/100 critic score based on limited professional input, underscoring a mature evolution that sacrifices the fizz of prior for broader accessibility. Overall, while not universally acclaimed for , Good Karma was recognized for delivering reliable pop craftsmanship suited to Roxette's established fanbase, without major controversies in coverage.

Achievements and criticisms

Good Karma marked Roxette's tenth studio album and their final full-length release before retired from recording and touring due to ongoing health complications from brain cancer treatment. The album's production represented a deliberate reconstruction of the duo's sound, incorporating modern elements while drawing from their pop-rock roots, as noted by in interviews emphasizing experimentation after Fredriksson's recovery. Despite its release coinciding with Roxette's legacy of over 75 million records sold worldwide, Good Karma did not achieve major awards or sales certifications in key markets like , the , or the . It lacked nominations from prominent bodies such as the or international equivalents during 2016-2017, contrasting with earlier Roxette honors like the 2002 Swedish government Music Export Prize. Critics pointed to inconsistencies in song quality, with some tracks accused of serving as filler amid stronger material, perpetuating perceptions of Roxette albums as uneven despite commercial intent. Reviews highlighted an overreliance on stylistic borrowing, describing the record as a "jumbled " of 1980s-2000s pop influences without cohesive , potentially diluting its impact in a saturated market. No significant arose around the album's content or promotion, though Fredriksson's health limited live support, shifting focus to studio output as a of resilience rather than .

Commercial performance

Sales and chart performance

Good Karma debuted at number one on the Swedish Albums Chart () upon its release on June 3, 2016. In the , the album entered the Official Albums Chart at number 61 on June 16, 2016, representing Roxette's first studio album to reach the top 100 since Have a Nice Day in 1999, and remained on the chart for one week. It achieved a higher peak of number 44 on the Scottish Albums Chart, also for one week. Subcharts reflected modest physical and download sales, with peaks at number 37 on the Official Physical Albums Chart and number 65 on the Official Album Downloads Chart. The did not enter major United States charts such as the 200. No specific sales certifications or unit figures have been publicly reported for Good Karma, consistent with its limited commercial longevity compared to Roxette's multi-platinum releases.

Track listing and credits

Track listing

The standard edition of Good Karma, released on CD and digital formats in , features 11 tracks with a total runtime of approximately 38 minutes.
No.TitleLength
1."Why Don'tcha?"2:46
2."It Just Happens"3:46
3."Good Karma"3:19
4.""3:12
5."You Make It Sound So Simple"3:42
6.""3:31
7."Some Other Summer"3:08
8."Why This Song?"3:34
9."After the Ocean"3:06
10."Revival"3:35
11."Stay (At Home, My Heart Is)"4:18
The Japanese edition includes a bonus track, "Excited", as track 12 (length 3:36).

Personnel

Marie Fredriksson provided lead vocals, while Per Gessle contributed lead and background vocals, guitars, and served as co-producer on the album. Christoffer Lundquist acted as co-producer, , programmer, mixer, and engineer, particularly at studio. Helena performed backing vocals. Additional production on select tracks involved Clarence Öfwerman. Design elements were handled by Wickholm Formavd.

References

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