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Life thru a Lens

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Life thru a Lens

Life thru a Lens is the debut solo album by English singer-songwriter Robbie Williams following his departure from Take That. Released on 29 September 1997 through Chrysalis Records, the album is influenced by Britpop, a departure from the poppier tone of the music Take That employed. The album's working name was The Show-Off Must Go On.

The album's first three singles, "Old Before I Die", "Lazy Days" and "South of the Border", were all moderate successes, but it was the fourth single "Angels" which catapulted Williams to international fame as a solo artist. Peaking at number four, it has sold over one million copies in the UK and is his best-selling single to date. The fifth and final single "Let Me Entertain You" reached number three. "Freedom", Williams' first solo single, a cover of George Michael's 1990 hit, is not featured on the album.

Life thru a Lens debuted at number 11 on the UK Albums Chart and initially remained in the lower regions, but, upon the chart success of "Angels", it began steadily climbing and finally reached number one in April 1998, five months after its release. Though never selling more than 60,000 copies in a single week, the album sold over 2,094,000 copies by November 2013, making it Williams' fourth-best-selling studio album and fifth-best-seller when considering Greatest Hits (2004).

The album cover art, a photograph of Williams at the centre of a crowd of photographers, was created by Andy Earl. In 2024, the cover was altered to a chimpanzee depiction of Williams for the theatrical poster of his biopic, Better Man.

After trying hard to find his own sound during a period of personal upheaval, Williams began recordings for the album at London's Maison Rouge studios in March 1997, shortly after his introduction to Guy Chambers. The title track, "Life thru a Lens", was written about his then-girlfriend Jacqueline Hamilton-Smith, who was a socialite. It is often mistakenly attributed to Tara Palmer-Tompkinson, but they did not date until 2006. "Ego a Go Go" was written about Gary Barlow, "South of the Border" discusses Kate Moss, and "Baby Girl Window" was inspired by Samantha Beckinsale and her late father, actor Richard Beckinsale. "One of God's Better People" and "Angels" were inspired by Williams' mother, Jan. Hidden track "Hello, Sir" is a poem that takes a dig at one of Williams' former teachers. Williams reprised part of the poem on the 1 Giant Leap song "My Culture".

John Bush of AllMusic wrote that Life thru a Lens "continually betrays overt influences from Oasis and other Britpop stars", a direction his former Take That bandmate Mark Owen had also chosen to pursue on his first solo album Green Man (1996). The album's music has also been characterised as power pop.

Writing for Melody Maker in October 1997, Robin Bresnark gave Life thru a Lens a negative review, writing: "There's nothing here... sure, Robbie Williams is as fascinating a hapless goon as we're ever likely to come across. But this album feels more like a press release than an album – and that's not what I call music." In a retrospective review, John Bush of AllMusic was very positive, giving it four and a half stars out of five. He called it "one of the best U.K. debuts of the '90s" and "an uninhibited joyride through all manner of British music, from glam to alternative to soft-rock to dance-pop" which "triumphs" due to "gorgeous production, Williams' irresistible personality, and the overall flavor of outrageous, utterly enjoyable pop music". He concluded it was "excellent". Robert Dimery included the album in the book 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

Martin C. Strong, writing in The Great Rock Discography, reflected that the general critical consensus on Life Thru a Lens was "that Williams was having the last laugh, beating his former Take That cronies hands down (both Gary Barlow and Mark Owen were taking the solo road with middling success) and winning over a cross section of musical palates with his irrepressible style." Colin Larkin of The Encyclopedia of Popular Music considered it an "excellent" album that eclipsed Barlow's album Open Road, "both musically and critically". Commenting on the album's music and it topping the UK charts 28 weeks after its initial release, Larkin wrote: "Never before had so many pundits and critics been proved so wrong." Rough Guides contributor Jane Holly wrote that Life Thru a Lens showed "a wide mix of styles", from ballads to rockers.

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