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Dua Lipa (album)
Dua Lipa (album)
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Dua Lipa
Dua Lipa wearing a scaled jacket, resting her head on her hand with wet hair over a blue-purple background. Her name and the album's title appear at the bottom in big block white letters.
Standard edition cover[note 1]
Studio album by
Released2 June 2017 (2017-06-02)
Recorded2013–2017
Studio
  • Atlantic, Comic Sands, Paramount, Pulse, Rocket Carousel, The Synagogue (Los Angeles)
  • Eg's, HyGrade, The Music Shed, Sarm, TaP / Strongroom 7, Wendyhouse (London)
  • KasaKoz (Toronto)
  • Modulator Music (Canada)
  • NRG (North Hollywood)
  • Sony/ATV[note 2]
  • Woodshed (Malibu)
  • Zenseven (Woodland Hills)
Genre
Length40:43
LabelWarner Bros.
Producer
Dua Lipa chronology
Dua Lipa
(2017)
Future Nostalgia
(2020)
Singles from Dua Lipa
  1. "New Love"
    Released: 21 August 2015
  2. "Be the One"
    Released: 30 October 2015
  3. "Last Dance"
    Released: 9 February 2016
  4. "Hotter than Hell"
    Released: 6 May 2016
  5. "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)"
    Released: 26 August 2016
  6. "Lost in Your Light"
    Released: 21 April 2017
  7. "New Rules"
    Released: 7 July 2017
  8. "IDGAF"
    Released: 12 January 2018

Dua Lipa is the debut studio album by English singer Dua Lipa. It was released on 2 June 2017 through Warner Bros. Records. The album is a dance-pop, electropop, and R&B record with elements of disco, hip hop, and tropical house. The production was handled by artists such as Digital Farm Animals, Andrew Wyatt, Greg Wells, Ian Kirkpatrick, Axident, and James Flannigan, alongside others. It includes a sole guest appearance from Miguel (who also received production credits on the record), as well as additional vocals from Chris Martin of Coldplay.

The album was supported by eight singles, including the UK top-ten singles "Be the One" and "IDGAF", as well as "New Rules", which became Lipa's first number-one on the UK Singles Chart and top-ten hit on the US Billboard Hot 100. Lipa promoted the album with appearances at several award shows, television programs and festivals, as well as embarking on a series of concert tours from 2016 to 2018. She also supported Troye Sivan, Bruno Mars and Coldplay on their respective tours. In October 2018, Lipa reissued the album, subtitled the Complete Edition, adding eight additional tracks including "One Kiss" with Calvin Harris, which was Lipa's second number-one song and the best-selling song of 2018 in the UK, and the UK top-ten single "Electricity" with Silk City.

Dua Lipa was met with generally favourable reviews from music critics. Many praised Lipa's vocals as well as the lyrics and production. It appeared on numerous year-end lists, including ones published by Billboard and Rolling Stone. The album was nominated for British Album of the Year at the Brit Awards, whilst "New Rules", "IDGAF", and "One Kiss", were all nominated for British Single of the Year, the latter of which won. The album also helped Lipa win the Grammy Award for Best New Artist. Despite being released in 2017, the album reached peak popularity and became commercially successful in 2018. It reached number three in the UK, and reached the top 10 in thirteen other countries. The album is certified multi-platinum in the UK and five other countries. As of February 2021, Dua Lipa has sales figures of six million units worldwide.

Background

[edit]
Justin Bieber playing the guitar and singing wearing a blue shirt and white pants.
Lipa was inspired by the discovery of Justin Bieber to begin her career using social media.

Lipa developed a love for music at an early age, influenced by her father who performed in the Kosovan rock band Oda.[2][3] She began singing at the age of five and wrote her first song about how she wanted to be like her mom when she was older.[4][5] Lipa played the cello in school and also auditioned for her school's choir, but was rejected after being told she could not sing.[6] She began singing lessons after that. While living in Pristina, Kosovo during her teen years, Lipa's ambition to start a music career grew.[7] At the age of 14, she wrote the song, "Lions & Tigers & Bears" which was inspired by The Wizard of Oz (1939).[8] She published it on her SoundCloud page as her first demo in February 2012.[6][9] Lipa determined that the smaller music industry of Kosovo did not match the type of career she wanted as she desired a "global scale" one. As a result, she relocated to London where she was born, at the age of 15.[7] Her parents felt comfortable allowing her to move there as the daughter of one of their friends lived there.[10]

After finishing school, Lipa took a gap year to find a manager while working at a restaurant.[11] She was influenced by the discovery of Justin Bieber on YouTube which inspired her to take the same route as he.[12][13] She began a modeling career to gain contacts in the music industry.[14][15] Lipa began posting covers of songs such as "If I Ain't Got You" (2004) by Alicia Keys and "Beautiful" (2002) by Christina Aguilera on YouTube.[4] Although her videos did not reach great popularity,[12] she used them as a form of portfolio and took them to London clubs such as KOKO where she thought she would meet people from the music industry who she could show them to.[10] Additionally, Lipa uploaded music to SoundCloud, gave demo CDs to radio stations and sang in advertisements. After starring in an X Factor commercial, she met a producer who offered her a publishing deal. Flummoxed by this, she contacted an online friend for help as she did not understand it. He redirected Lipa to his attorney who advised her to not take it. The lawyer was impressed by her and introduced Lipa to Ben Mawson of TAP management while she was holding meetings with management companies.[11][16] She eventually signed a publishing and management deal with TAP and a record deal with Warner Records; the latter company wanting her because they did not have a big female pop artist.[16]

Writing and recording

[edit]

Early sessions and development

[edit]
Nelly Furtado looking down while performing in a white sequin dress with a rhinestone-covered black belt.
In early sessions, Lipa desired to create a sound mixing that of J. Cole and Nelly Furtado.

After meeting Mawson in 2013, Lipa was invited to writing sessions by him and Ed Millett, the co-owners of TAP; this happened while they were deciding whether to sign her.[16] Mawson and Millett intended on having Lipa learn the songwriter trade with the help of a wide range of collaborators. She was more interested in "discovering" her sound at first than in landing a record deal; she wanted to have a sound like a cross between rapper J. Cole and Nelly Furtado, but the reaction of the producers was not very positive.[17][18] Lipa was still working as a waitress and was not getting much sleep. Thus, Mawson and Millett gave her a monthly salary so she could quit her job and focus on songwriting.[16] They organized an intense period of artist development where Lipa went into sessions five days a week with different writers until something came out of them.[19]

Lipa found it difficult going into the early sessions because she did not know the writers and producers there.[20] She thought it was difficult to open up to strangers. Lipa would attempt to get to know them before writing to make herself more comfortable.[21] The singer also attempted to create only radio songs in early sessions, which limited her and stressed her out, resulting in her creativity lacking and an amount of pressure being put on her. Lipa eventually got over this and wrote about how situations made her feel; that is when she started writing the songs she enjoyed.[22] When Lipa began writing, she had several ideas and knew how to get her thoughts out. However, she had trouble building a song so she enlisted the help of co-writers, many of which she became good friends with.[23] She described it as a learning process and slowly became confident with her songwriting.[24] As Lipa wrote more, she developed a skill for songwriting leading her to writing songs about situations relevant to her or her friends.[25] The singer took some inspiration with her writing from the "dramas" she saw while working as a hostess and "the dark side of nightlife". She desired to create this idea with as "seductive and sweet but doesn't sugar-coat" what happens. Lipa stated that she wanted to bring "a bit more realness" speak the truth "about what being a teenager is really like" as before music was dominated with how amazing it was.[26] In 2015, Lipa made four trips to Los Angeles to write songs;[25] she got a palm tree tattoo on her left elbow to commemorate her first month of writing songs there.[27] Songwriter Lucy Taylor gave Lipa "Be the One" before she had released any music;[28] the singer was reluctant to record it due to the fact that she had not written it.[29]

Lipa formed a close partnership with producer Koz.[14] She would often send him stuff that was just the piano and he would produce it and make it cohesive. Lipa recalled that he made everything easier for her and understood her vision for the album.[14][18] Koz revealed that he was impressed by Lipa's unique vocals.[30] Of the 25 original songs included on every edition of the album, Koz produced nine, including "Hotter than Hell" and "Thinking 'Bout You".[1] They were the first two songs written for the album and were written in the early sessions arranged by Mawson and Millet.[16][31] The former helped define what the album would sound like and helped the singer land her record deal with Warner Bros in 2014.[32][33] Following this, Lipa went into many failed writing sessions attempting to recreate the song. She thought she needed more songs like it but eventually realized that she did not. That is when Lipa wrote "New Love" in New York and "Last Dance" in Toronto.[21] The latter song also had a role in defining the sound of the album; Lipa stated that once she heard its finished version, she would take the song to producers and say "this is my sound".[21]

Later writing sessions

[edit]
Emily Warren sitting at a table with flowers, resting her head on her hands.
MNEK performing on a stage wearing a multi-coloured shirt.
Emily Warren and MNEK co-wrote tracks on the album.

Lipa normally would write a song in one day, usually within two to three hours.[34] Lipa would often go into studio sessions with an idea already in mind and beginning writing, slowly realizing how the lyrics has relevance in her life.[14] She would also write notes and take them to the studio to write a song about them, only if the note was still relevant to her at the moment.[34] As she cared more about the story, Lipa would make up melodies to fit around her lyrics and often change the melody so she could get all the words that she needed in the story.[34][35] Lipa felt as though the writing sessions were her form of therapy.[34] Aside from Cole and Furtado, Lipa took inspiration from artists including Sting, the Police, David Bowie, Radiohead, Stereophonics, Pink, Destiny's Child, Missy Elliott, Christina Aguilera, Method Man, Redman, 50 Cent, Snoop Dogg, Busta Rhymes, Kendrick Lamar, Schoolboy Q, and Chance the Rapper.[24]

"No Goodbyes" was a personal song for Lipa to write; she described it as the hardest song for her to write on the album. She pre-empted the future when writing it as she was mourning a relationship she was still in, but hoping for the best. It took Lipa a while to have the courage to write it as she was worried the person she wrote it about would know it is about them.[36][37][38] Lipa explained that she had been travelling a lot and letting that person down, where they were not living their lives while waiting for her.[27] "For Julian" was written by Lipa and Eg White for Lipa's friend who was going through a hard period in their life. The song was not released digitally, however it appeared on the Japanese edition of the album.[39]

Final sessions and overview

[edit]
Miguel performing in a white shirt with a green vest and pants.
Chris Martin wearing a black outfit and playing a brown electric guitar.
Collaborations with Miguel and Chris Martin were last-minute additions to the album.

Lipa co-wrote every song on all editions of the album excluding "Be the One", "New Rules", "Scared to Be Lonely" and "No Lie".[1] She turned down several songs offered to her by other artists because she felt they did not fit her style. Mawson explained that these songs ended up being massive hits for other female artists.[27] "Scared to Be Lonely" and "No Lie" were both offered to Lipa with Martin Garrix and Sean Paul both desiring a collaboration with her.[40][41] Lipa wanted to finish the album before she put any music out so she could plan out the marketing campaign.[6] However, the singer still went into studio sessions on off-days just in case she could write something else.[21] The album was eventually pushed back as the singer got some exciting opportunities.[42] Following this, Lipa added ten new songs to the album so she could showcase another side to her.[36] She wrote upwards of 160 songs for the album, many of which were never finished as she was constantly writing new ones and expressing where she was in her life.[23][43] Lipa also collaborated with Nineteen85, Darkchild, BloodPop and Noonie Bao, but none of the songs made it onto the album.[19][32][44] She would often remove a song from the album then re-add it.[23]

Lipa took two trips to Los Angeles when finishing the album where "IDGAF", "Lost in Your Light", "Homesick" and "Begging" were written. The trips solidified and closed the album for the singer.[45] Also during those trips, Ian Kirkpatrick played Lipa "New Rules" which led to her recording it.[45] "Lost In Your Light" and "Homesick" are collaborations with Miguel and Coldplay frontman Chris Martin, both of whom Lipa was a fan of.[46][47] The album was finished on 20 March 2017 and was created in studios between Berlin, London, Los Angeles, New York, Stockholm and Toronto.[48][49][26] As Lipa spent a lot of time on the album attempting to perfect it, she got the word "patience" tattooed to remind herself to wait until everything in perfect.[27] Work on the Complete Edition continued throughout 2018, where "One Kiss" with Calvin Harris,[50] "Electricity" with Silk City,[51] and "Kiss and Make Up" with Blackpink were recorded. The latter song was originally intended to be a solo song for Lipa, however, the singer decided to add the band to it after members Jennie and Lisa attended her concert in Seoul.[52][53]

Music and lyrics

[edit]

Overview

[edit]

Musically, Dua Lipa is a dance-pop, electropop and R&B album,[54][55][56] with disco, hip hop and tropical house elements.[36][57][58] Lipa describes the album's sound as dark pop, progressive pop and "dance-crying".[4][59] She explained that the sound embodied hip hop-influenced verses with heavy flow and raw, truthful lyrics, alongside a big, simple pop chorus.[18][32][60] Several of the songs stem from sad experiences;[59] Lipa desired to mix darker lyrics with pop music one could dance to.[35] She stated that listeners were often surprised when looking at the lyrics due to the dance sound of the songs.[60] The singer concluded by mentioning that honesty is the key to the sound.[4] The album is very diverse and explores several different genres.[31][35] The album balances between upbeat empowerment songs and stripped-back songs about real emotion.[36]

Dua Lipa avoids overproduction and uses electronic instrumentation alongside thick synthesizers, detailed percussion and complex melodies.[61][62][63][64] The beats used on the album are influenced by clubby pop and have a soulful deep house pulse.[65] Lipa uses husky and powerful rock vocals.[59][66] The lyrics deal with themes of female empowerment, relationships, heartbreak, love and loss, all of which are inspired by sadness.[23][38][67] Lipa never wanted the lyrics to come off as submissive or weak rather empowering. She described vulnerability as something different that is included in the album.[68] Additionally, it has themes of self-identification and using Lipa's experiences and realizations to brave the universal portents and predicaments of love. She also sings about the depressing and imploring qualities of a breakup.[57] Several songs on the album contain biblical references and religious imagery to showcase the ups and downs of relationships.[69]

Songs

[edit]
Painting of God creating the earth.
"Genesis" quotes and gets its title from the first book of the bible, which it shares a name with.

Dua Lipa opens with "Genesis", a 1980s-styled R&B slowburner set to an electro-guitar.[66][62][70][71] The song gets its title from the first book of the bible and quotes Genesis 1 in the opening line: "in the beginning, God created Heaven and Earth".[31][69] Vocally, Lipa accentuates and elongates certain lyrics while the lyrics see Lipa re-assessing a relationship.[36][72] She apologizes to her partner for the complications that come with fame and longs for the honeymoon period of the relationship, realizing that people are in a constant state of change.[33][36][68] Electropop track "Lost In Your Light" sees Lipa duetting with Miguel.[73] It features a disco-tinged sway, electro rhythms and percussion-heavy beats alongside a hip hop middle eight.[74][75][76][77] Described by Lipa as "one of the happiest" songs on the album, the lyrics see the singers discussing how one can get lost in the middle of all the emotions at the beginning of a relationship.[78] In "Hotter than Hell", Lipa taunts an ex-boyfriend and takes revenge on him for his actions, showcasing empowerment and heartache themes.[59][79][80] It is a dance-pop,[54] electropop[22] and tropical house[81] track driven by marimbas and synthesizers,[82][83] that features church organs and bongos.[84][85] The song quotes Arctic Monkeys' "505" from their album Favourite Worst Nightmare (2007).[84]

Painting of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden
"Garden" references Adam and Eve leaving the Garden of Eden, using it as a metaphor to describe a breakup.

"Be the One" is a dream pop, Europop and synth-pop track that Lipa described as about "self belief, perseverance, and fighting for what you want".[59][86][87][88] With lyrics about the miscommunication in a relationship, the song sees Lipa pleading for her lover to take her back for good.[28][89] The song's production features tropical R&B beats, 1980s-styled grooves and electropop riffs.[66][90][91] "IDGAF", an acronym for "I don't give a fuck", is a pop song set to an electric guitar riff and militaristic drums.[62][92] In the lyrics, Lipa makes sure her ex knows she is not thinking of him after he attempts to rekindling things with her.[93][94] Inspired by Lipa's unsuccessful modeling career, "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)" is about rejecting people who want others to change and having the upper hand in a relationship.[75][95][96] It is categorized as a futuristic disco and electropop track with tropical beats.[90][97][98] Lipa uses indietronica vocals and blows a kiss at the end of the chorus.[99][100] "Garden" uses the metaphor of Adam and Eve leaving the Garden of Eden to describe a breakup and Lipa longing for the idyllic parts of a relationship.[68][69] It sees the singer acting as a reflective girlfriend at the end of the relationship as the religious imagery is juxtaposed with betrayal themes.[89][101] Musically, the song is a soulful, Eurovision-styled, melodramatic power ballad with a stormy production and apocalyptic percussion.[66][101][63]

"No Goodbyes" is a dark song with dance elements that starts off slowly, where Lipa uses a breathy vocal style.[101][61][81][102] The song's lyrics discuss a relationship destined to fail, showing a vulnerable side to the album.[27][72] "Thinking 'Bout You" is a stripped-back, acoustic R&B and retro-soul ballad driven by an acoustic guitar.[90][63][54][103] The song sees Lipa attempting to forget about a past romance.[63] In "New Rules", Lipa gives herself a set of rules to prevent her from getting back with an ex-boyfriend.[104] An electropop and tropical house song,[81][105] it features an EDM production that makes use of a dancehall rhythm and bashment elements.[68][106][62] "Begging" is a synth-heavy song with a modern production, containing upbeat melodies, dramatic piano chords and 1980s elements.[104][72][107] The standard edition of Dua Lipa closes with "Homesick", a piano ballad duet with Martin.[81] The lyrics discuss being away from loved ones in order to pursue one's dream.[47]

Bonus tracks

[edit]
alt=Sean Paul singing wearing a black shirt with a green design Calvin Harris performing in a blue shirt with green lights behind him.
Black and white photo of Martin Garrix using his DJ turn tables
Calvin Harris performing in a blue shirt with green lights behind him.
Black and white photo of Diplo next to a photo of Mark Ronson wearing a red shirt and blazer on a red background
Blackpink posing for a photo with a white background. From left to right, Lisa, Jisoo, Jennie and Rosé.
The Complete Edition of the album includes collaborations with Sean Paul, Martin Garrix, Calvin Harris, Silk City (Diplo and Mark Ronson), and Blackpink.

The first new track on the deluxe edition of Dua Lipa is "Dreams", an island-inflected dance track with a modern production containing horns, heavy synthesizers and 1980s elements.[71][104] Lipa described "Room for 2" as a "scary kid's nursery rhyme".[80] It is a dark ballad driven by a piano.[71][108] "New Love" is a synth-pop song set to a tribal drum beat, with neo soul and R&B elements.[109][110][111] Lipa described its meaning as "facing the fear of losing the only thing that matters to you".[112] The lyrics of "Bad Together" discuss great sex and see Lipa asking for divine forgiveness for her sins in the chorus.[25][69] The production contains electronic pings and African drums.[71][113] "Last Dance", the final deluxe edition track, is a chillwave, dance-pop and post-EDM track[114][115][116] with a glitchy, tribal production that uses house synthesizer chords.[117][118] In the song, Lipa sings about a relationship that could end suddenly.[119] Japanese bonus track "For Julian" is a slow, jazz-inspired song about God answering one's prayers.[39][69]

The first new track on Dua Lipa: Complete Edition, "Want To", is a robo-pop song where Lipa uses electro vocals over moody synths.[120][57][71] The song showcases the singer braving the universal portents and predicaments of love.[57] "Running" is set to an R&B piano and tells a story of wounded pride, while her vocals have strong accompaniments.[120][57] Lipa's collaboration with Blackpink, "Kiss and Make Up", is a blend of dance, electropop, and reggaeton genres, that makes use of bass synths and vocoders.[121][122][123][124] Lyrically the song is about using physical affection to resolve a fight between two lovers with lyrics in English and Korean.[122][125] In "One Kiss" with Harris, Lipa sings about using a kiss to trigger intense lust between two lovers.[126] It is a dance-pop, diva house and tropical house track that makes use of brass instrumentation.[127][128][129][130] "Electricity", her dance-pop and piano house collaboration with Silk City, draws from Chicago house and 1990s music;[131][132][133] it sees Lipa using gospel house vocals and telling a story of two lovers with a kindred spirit.[134][135] The retro-pop production consists of disco strings and soulful piano stabs.[136][137][138] Future bass track "Scared to Be Lonely", a collaboration with Garrix, has an emotive tone.[139] It uses electronic strings and hi-hats in its production,[140][141] while Lipa ponders whether a relationship is legit.[142] Paul's song "No Lie" featuring Lipa is a blend of reggae and tropical pop genres.[143][117] The song is about Paul's attraction to a woman in a club scene.[144]

Marketing

[edit]

Title and artwork

[edit]
"Dua Lipa" written in all caps in block, hollow letters.
The Dua Lipa album logo used during the album's campaign.

In July 2016, the cover art for Dua Lipa was revealed, however, it received negative reviews from fans with many petitioning for it to be changed.[145] The following month, Lipa announced the album's title and revealed the revised standard edition cover art and thanked her fans for being "patient and supportive" during the time. Rachel Sonis of Idolator described the cover art as "minimal yet smoldering" and it features the singer in a scaly jacket, staring into the camera with wet hair covering one side of her face over a blue-purple background. Lipa explained the title by saying "the reason it is self-titled is because this album is me. It's a representation of who I am as a person and as an artist".[146][147] Other editions of the album use the same cover art with different backgrounds; the deluxe edition uses a purple background while the Complete Edition uses a glittery background.[148][120]

Release

[edit]
Dua Lipa on the street wearing a red hoodie and a glittery jacket.
Lipa in the album's press photoshoot

In August 2015, Lipa released her debut single "New Love" as the lead single from Dua Lipa.[149] The second single "Be the One" was released on 30 October 2015 alongside the album's confirmation.[150] The song was her breakthrough single and became a sleeper hit across Europe and Oceania.[29][151][59] It also became Lipa's first solo top 10 single in the UK, where it peaked at number nine.[152] "Last Dance" and "Hotter than Hell" were released as singles the following year.[153][154] The latter achieved moderate success and became her first UK Singles Chart entry where it peaked at number 15.[152][86] In July 2016, it was revealed that Lipa had set 30 September of that year as the release date for her debut album.[43] The following month, it was revealed that the album had been pushed back to 10 February 2017.[155] On 24 August 2016, the singer formally announced the album.[156] The deluxe edition of the album was made available for pre-order two days later alongside the release of "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)".[146] The song became Lipa's first official single in the United States resulting in it becoming her first entry on the Billboard Hot 100 chart, reaching number 72; it also reached number 30 in the UK.[152][96][157] "Room for 2" and "Thinking 'Bout You" were released as promotional singles on 28 October 2016 and 6 January 2017, respectively.[158][159] Following the release of the latter song, Lipa delayed the album for a second time to June 2017 due to her desire to perfect it and to fit "new songs and exciting collaborations" on the album.[160]

"Lost In Your Light" featuring Miguel was released as the final single prior to the album in April.[161] The standard and deluxe editions of Dua Lipa were released on 2 June 2017.[162] Two additional tracks were included on the Italian special edition of the album including Lipa's cover of Cher's "Bang Bang" which was used in her campaigns for Patrizia Pepe.[163][164] A Japanese edition was released alongside the album and includes original song "For Julian";[165] it was later extended by the Japanese Special Edition.[166] A 360 Reality Audio edition of the album was released in October 2020.[167] "New Rules" and "IDGAF" were issued as singles following the album's release.[168][169] Both became commercially successful and reached the top 10 of the UK Singles Chart.[152][170][171] The former became Lipa's first UK number 1 single and her first Billboard Hot 100 top 10 entry.[172][173] "Homesick" was released as a promotional single on 1 December 2017.[174] The singer released a Deezer Sessions and Spotify Sessions extended play (EP) that feature live versions of songs on the album.[175][176] A vinyl EP The Only with songs off the album was also released as well as Live Acoustic, an EP featuring covers by the singer.[177][178]

Dua Lipa: Complete Edition

[edit]
Dua Lipa wearing a glittery dress against a blue background
Lipa for Jaguar Cars for the release of Dua Lipa: Complete Edition

Following the album's release, Lipa teased a reissue stating that she would be releasing live versions of fan-favourite tracks "Running" and "Want To", both of which were leaked.[23][179] On 4 September 2018, she officially announced the reissue titled Dua Lipa: Complete Edition as the album's "super deluxe edition".[180] The reissue includes two discs: the first containing the deluxe album and the second containing eight additional tracks including Lipa's previously released collaborations, "One Kiss" with Calvin Harris, "Electricity" with Silk City, "Scared to Be Lonely" with Martin Garrix and "No Lie" by Sean Paul featuring the singer.[181][182] All four of the collaborations reached the top 15 of the UK Singles Chart and "One Kiss" spent eight weeks at its summit while also reaching the top of charts in over a dozen countries.[152][170][183] The reissue was released on 19 October 2018 alongside an exclusive Japanese CD edition that includes five additional tracks.[184][185]

Dua Lipa: Complete Edition was supported by two promotional singles, "Want To" and "Kiss and Make Up"; the former was released on 6 September 2018 and the latter was released alongside the reissue.[186][187] "Want To" also promoted Lipa's I-Pace campaign with British car manufacturer Jaguar where users of the car could create remixes of the song based and how they drove as well as personalized remixes based on their Spotify streaming history. The remixes mixed up moods, tempos, arrangement and different musical styles, including dance, drum and bass, hip hop, orchestral and pop. The campaign was announced at a secret gig in Amsterdam where Lipa as well as celebrities such as Dutch model Doutzen Kroes and French actress Alix Bénézech created their own remixes by driving the car. Shortly thereafter, "Want To" became the most remixed song in history.[188][189] Lipa later revealed that releasing the B-sides taught her to think of an album's life span differently and take full advantage of it.[190]

Promotion

[edit]
Dua Lipa walking on the street wearing a "Mwah" choker and a blue jacket.
Lipa in the See in Blue documentary

Warner Bros. Records began promoting Lipa's campaign in 2014 when she signed with the label.[191] The singer promoted her music through the use of social media as well as her campaigns with Adidas, MAC Cosmetics and Patrizia Pepe.[49][192][193][194] In December 2016, she released a documentary short film produced by The Fader teamed up with YouTube Music and directed by Robert Semmer, titled See in Blue that details her music journey thus far.[195] It featured an acoustic performance of "Genesis".[196][197] For further promotion, Lipa gave several interviews for publications such as the American Broadcasting Company,[12] the British Broadcasting Corporation,[23] Billboard,[192] The Observer,[198] The Independent,[42] The New York Times,[59] NME,[199] the Official Charts Company[200] and Variety.[30]

Live performances

[edit]
Dua Lipa with her arms out singing into a microphone. She wears a white shirt and red plaid pants.
Lipa performing on the Self-Titled Tour in February 2018

Following the release of "New Love", Lipa began promoting her music and performing unreleased songs that she had not yet finished, before she had finished her debut album.[23][13] Lipa gave her first live performance at a record label showcase in Berlin and her first festival performance at Eurosonic Noorderslag in the Netherlands in January 2016.[201][202] She embarked on the 2016 UK Tour,[203][204] Hotter than Hell Tour[205] and US and Europe Tour throughout 2016 and 2017.[206] She also served as an opening act for Troye Sivan on the Suburbia Tour,[207] Bruno Mars on the 24K Magic World Tour[208] and Coldplay on the A Head Full of Dreams Tour.[209] The singer performed at awards showing including the American Music Awards,[210] Billboard Music Awards,[211] Brit Awards[212] and Grammy Awards.[213] Her appearances on television shows include Jimmy Kimmel Live!,[214] Later... with Jools Holland,[215] The Ellen DeGeneres Show,[216] The Graham Norton Show,[217] The Jonathan Ross Show,[218] The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,[219] The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon[220] and Saturday Night Live.[209]

The singer was part of the line-up for events including Capital FM's Summertime Ball and Jingle Bell Ball,[221][222] as well as the Glastonbury Festival,[223] iHeartRadio Music Festival,[224] Jingle Ball Tour[225] and UEFA Champions League Final.[226] The singer headlined the Sunny Hill Festival in Pristina, which was organized by her father Dukagjin.[227] The album's supporting tour, the Self-Titled Tour, ran from October 2017 to December 2018 and beginning in Brighton[228] and concluding in Denver.[note 3] She performed a total of 245 shows on the tour and tattooed the number on her back.[10] During the live promotion, Lipa received backlash for her lack of stage presence while performing.[232] A meme of her dancing went viral, which she later revealed affected her mental health stating "for a short period of time, it messed with my mental health. You know, I'd go on stage and if somebody was filming me, in my head, I wasn't, like, 'Oh, they're filming me because they want to keep it.' I was like, 'They're going to film it so they can laugh at me or something'".[233]

Critical reception

[edit]
Professional ratings
Aggregate scores
SourceRating
AnyDecentMusic?6.8/10[234]
Metacritic72/100[235]
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarStar[63]
Clash8/10[62]
DIYStarStarStar[101]
Evening StandardStarStarStarStar[66]
Financial TimesStarStarStar[54]
The GuardianStarStarStar[81]
The Line of Best Fit7/10[89]
musicOMHStarStarStarHalf star[99]
NMEStarStarStarStar[61]
QStarStarStar[236]

Dua Lipa received generally positive reviews from music critics.[237] At Metacritic, which assigns a normalised rating out of 100 to reviews from mainstream publications, the album received an average score of 72, based on eight reviews.[235] AnyDecentMusic? gave the album a 6.8 out of 10 from nine gathered reviews.[234] For the Financial Times, Ludovic Hunter-Tilney noted that it is predominated by "upbeat dance-pop of impressively solid quality".[54] Sean Ward of The 405 thought that the singer "has comfortably anchored herself in the category of pop innovator" with the album.[102] Evening Standard's Rick Pearson said "this is high-quality stuff from an artist headed for the biggest of things".[66]

In The Line of Best Fit, Claire Biddles said "this is a mostly compelling and wholly fun trip through modern pop with a charismatic protagonist, that hangs together way better than it should".[89] Alex Green of Clash lauded Dua Lipa as "a debut album brimming with confidence, confidence not only in Lipa's own voice and her eye for a chorus, but in the emotive quality of her lyrics".[62] Neil Z. Yeung of AllMusic praised the album as "a delightful collection of catchy pop gems where the songs only serve to highlight her vocal prowess" and "an excellent first effort from a budding pop star".[63] Writing for NME, Jamie Milton wrote that Lipa's voice "could make the thickest synths seem tame in comparison and carries a 20-a-day raspiness capable of making heartfelt ballads sound edgy", adding that "it's equally impressive to hear how confidently the debut holds itself together, flitting between styles but always shining a spotlight on a legitimate pop sensation".[61]

Ben Hogwood of musicOMH referred to Lipa's "powerful and distinctive" voice as "one of the most distinctive you will hear in pop music currently", while commenting that "the only potential issue with her approach lies in the production behind the songs". Hogwood concluded that "the hope is that her talents will get more room and less post-production time".[99] Kate Solomon of Q magazine praised Lipa's voice as "very, very good" and opined, "What makes this album more than just a load of precision-engineered musical nothingness between a series of tentpole singles is Lipa herself. Songs that in other hands would be little more than throwaway filler swell into anthems for girls who can't stop falling in love".[236] In a mixed review, The Guardian's Hannah J. Davies stated that "despite a few generic offerings", the album is "a solid pop debut that is high on summery nonchalance".[81] DIY writer Alim Kheraj remarked that "across the album's 12 tracks there are bangers aplenty", but ultimately found that a lot of the album "feels overthought and calculated".[101]

Accolades

[edit]

Lipa received numerous accolades for Dua Lipa, including a nomination for Album of the Year at the BBC Music Awards,[238] a nomination for Foreign Pop/Rock Album or Soundtrack of the Year at the Hungarian Music Awards,[239] and a win for International Album of the Year at the LOS40 Music Awards.[240] In 2017, Lipa was nominated for the Critics' Choice award at the 2017 Brit Awards.[241] At the 2018 Brit Awards, the album was nominated for British Album of the Year whilst "New Rules" received nominations for British Single of the Year and British Music Video of the Year; she won British Breakthrough Act and British Female Solo Artist at the ceremony.[242] The following year, "IDGAF" and "One Kiss" were nominated for British Single of the Year and British Music Video of the Year; "One Kiss" won the former award.[243] Lipa won Best New Artist at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards and "Electricity" won Best Dance Recording.[244] Billboard ranked Dua Lipa as the 43rd best album of 2017 and it placed at number 35 on Complex's year-list.[245][246] In Pitchfork, the album was placed at number 20 on their best pop and R&B of 2017 while Rolling Stone named it the year's ninth-best pop album.[56][65]

Commercial performance

[edit]

Dua Lipa was a commercial success.[11] It was a sleeper hit, reaching success internationally in 2018.[247] In June 2017, Dua Lipa debuted at number five on the UK Albums Chart with first week sales of 16,223 units.[248] In its 38th week, the album reached a peak of number three on the chart selling 9,518 units; it was boosted by the singer's appearance at the 2018 Brit Awards.[249] Following the October 2018 release of the Complete Edition, the album jumped from number 56 to number nine on the chart with 7,651 units sold.[250] In April 2021, the album spent its 200th week on the chart and it has not left it since its debut.[152] Of that time, the album spent 179 weeks in the chart's top 40, making it the seventeenth album with the most weeks in the region.[251] Dua Lipa was awarded 4× platinum certification from the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) in 2025. As of April 2021, the album has sales figures of 720,505 units in the country.[252] On the UK Singles Chart, the album is tied in fifth for an album with the most top-10 singles with six.[253] Nine songs on the album have been certified platinum or multi-platinum in the United Kingdom, while three songs have been certified silver.[254]

In the United States, Dua Lipa debuted at number 86 on the Billboard 200 chart dated 24 June 2017.[255] It departed the chart the next week, however, it re-entered at number 162 four weeks following.[256] In February 2018, the album spent its 32nd week on the chart where it reached a peak of number 27 with 15,000 units sold.[257] With boosting from the Complete Edition, the album jumped from number 129 to 42 on the chart in October of the same year. This resulted in it being awarded the "greatest gainer" accolade on the chart for that week.[258] The album spent a total of 97 weeks on the chart.[259] In June 2019, it was awarded a platinum certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for selling one million album-equivalent units in the US.[260] In Canada, the album reached number 14 and was awarded a quadruple platinum certification from Music Canada for sales of 320,000 album-equivalent units in the country.[261][262]

In Australia, Dua Lipa debuted at number 16 on the ARIA Albums Chart in June 2017, before reaching a peak of number eight the following April. It has spent over 100 weeks on the chart and was awarded a gold certification from the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for selling 35,000 album-equivalent units in the country.[263] In New Zealand, the album reached the 7th position and had 30,000 album-equivalent unit sales, resulting in it being awarded a double platinum certification from the Recorded Music NZ (RMNZ).[264] Additionally, the album has reached the top 10 of charts in the Flanders region of Belgium,[265] Croatia,[266] the Czech Republic,[267] Denmark,[268] the Netherlands,[269] Greece,[270] Ireland,[271] Norway,[272] Poland,[273] Scotland[274] and Sweden.[275] It was also certified quadruple platinum in Norway and triple platinum in Brazil.[276][277] In October 2018, Dua Lipa became the most-streamed album by a female artist on Spotify,[278][279] and has been streamed over eleven billion times.[280] As of February 2021, the album has sold six million units worldwide.[281]

Track listing

[edit]
Standard edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Genesis"
3:25
2."Lost in Your Light" (featuring Miguel)
3:23
3."Hotter than Hell"
3:07
4."Be the One"
  • Digital Farm Animals
  • Tarrant[c]
3:22
5."IDGAF"
  • Kozmeniuk
  • Principato[d]
  • Blackwood[c]
3:37
6."Blow Your Mind (Mwah)"Levine2:58
7."Garden"
  • Wells
  • Kozmeniuk
3:47
8."No Goodbyes"
3:36
9."Thinking 'Bout You"
  • Lipa
  • Adam Argyle
Kozmeniuk2:51
10."New Rules"Kirkpatrick3:29
11."Begging"
3:14
12."Homesick"Bill Rahko3:50
Total length:40:43
Deluxe edition
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
13."Dreams"
Ten Ven3:40
14."Room for 2"
Ten Ven3:28
15."New Love"
  • Haynie
  • Wyatt
4:31
16."Bad Together"TMS3:58
17."Last Dance"
Kozmeniuk3:48
Total length:60:08
Complete Edition (disc two)
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)Length
1."Want To"
  • Lipa
  • Amish Dilipkumar Patel
  • Andrew Jackson
  • ADP
  • Kozmeniuk
3:31
2."Running"
  • Lipa
  • Wyatt
Kozmeniuk3:41
3."Kiss and Make Up" (with Blackpink)Banx & Ranx3:09
4."One Kiss" (with Calvin Harris)Harris3:34
5."Electricity" (with Silk City)3:58
6."Scared to Be Lonely" (with Martin Garrix)
  • Garrix
  • Valley Girl
  • Tuinfort
  • Blackwood
3:40
7."No Lie" (with Sean Paul)
3:41
8."New Rules" (live)
  • Ailin
  • Warren
  • Kirkpatrick
  • Reynolds
  • Will Bowerman[d]
4:35
Total length:29:53

Notes

[edit]
  • ^[a] signifies an additional producer
  • ^[b] signifies an additional vocal producer
  • ^[c] signifies a vocal producer
  • ^[d] signifies a co-producer
  • "Homesick" features additional vocals by Chris Martin.
  • The Italian special edition includes the bonus track "Dreams", and "Bang Bang" as track 13 and 14.
  • The Japanese edition includes "Hotter than Hell" (Miike Snow remix) and "For Julian".
  • The Japanese special edition includes "New Rules" (Initial Talk remix), "IDGAF" (Initial Talk remix), and "IDGAF" (Hazers remix).

Personnel

[edit]

Standard editions

[edit]

Musicians

  • Dua Lipa – vocals, backing vocals, songwriting
  • Andreas Schuller – keyboards, percussion
  • Leroy Clampitt – guitar
  • Miguel – drums, percussion, bass, vocals
  • Rick Nowels – electric guitar, keyboards
  • Stephen "Koz" Kozmeniuk – guitar, drums, synths, keyboards, bass, piano, additional drums, synth programming, programming, backing vocals
  • Dean Reid – percussion, synth bass, electric guitar, keyboards
  • Mighty Mike – live drums
  • Zac Rae – piano, synths
  • Jay Reynolds – additional keyboards
  • Aadin Church – backing vocals
  • Talay Riley – backing vocals
  • Lucy Taylor – backing vocals
  • Jack Tarrant – guitar
  • MNEK – additional backing vocals
  • Todd Clark – additional backing vocals
  • Larzz Principato – guitar
  • Jon Levine – keyboards, Rhodes, bass, guitar, drum programming
  • Greg Wells – piano, drums, bass, synths
  • Grades – keyboards, programming, drums
  • Adam Argyle – guitar
  • Ian Kirkpatrick – programming
  • Cara Salimando – backing vocals
  • James Flannigan – piano, drums, drum programming, synth strings, percussion, programming
  • Chris Martin – additional vocals, piano
  • Tom Neville – percussion, programming, keyboards
  • Tom Barnes – drums
  • Pete Kelleher – keyboards
  • Ben Kohn – guitar
  • Matt Vlahovich – additional keyboards
  • Eg White – electric guitar, sampler, synths, drum programming, wurlitzer, hammond

Technical

  • Axident – production
  • Big Taste – additional production
  • Lorna Blackwood – additional vocal production, vocal production
  • Cameron Gower Poole – additional vocal production, engineering
  • Jeff Gunnell – engineering assistance
  • Tim Burns – mixing
  • John Davis – mastering
  • Miguel – production
  • Stephen "Koz" Kozmeniuk – production, additional production
  • Manny Marroquin – mixing
  • Chris Galland – mix engineering
  • Jeff Jackson – mix engineering assistance
  • Robin Florent – mix engineering assistance
  • Kieron Menzies – engineering
  • Dean Reid – engineering
  • Trevor Yasuda – engineering
  • Chris Garcia – engineering
  • Chris Gehringer – mastering
  • Jay Reynolds – additional production, mixing
  • Tom Neville – vocal production
  • Michael Sonier – engineering assistance
  • Şerban Ghenea – mixing
  • John Hanes – engineering for mix
  • Digital Farm Animals – production
  • Jack Tarrant – vocal production
  • Evelyn Yard – recording
  • Larzz Principato – co-production
  • Josh Gudwin – mixing
  • Joel Peters – engineering
  • Jon Levine – production, engineering
  • Greg Wells – production, engineering
  • Grades – co-production, vocal recording
  • Matty Green – mixing, mastering
  • Olly Thompson – engineering assistance
  • Ian Kirkpatrick – production, vocal production, engineering
  • James Flannigan – production
  • Suzy Shinn – additional vocal production
  • Matt Deutchman – production co-ordination
  • Bill Rahko – production, engineering
  • Jordan "DJ Swivel" Young – mixing
  • Aleks von Korff – engineering assistance
  • Ten Ven – production
  • Emile Haynie – production
  • Andrew Wyatt – production
  • Ike Schultz – mixing assistance
  • TMS – production
  • Eg White – production, engineering

Dua Lipa: Complete Edition

[edit]

Musicians

  • Dua Lipa – vocals
  • Stephen Kozmeniuk – synthesizer, bass, drums
  • Andrew Wyatt – piano
  • Blackpink[note 4] – vocals
  • Banx & Ranx[note 5] – drums, bass, synths, keys
  • Chelcee Grimes – backing vocals
  • Silk City[note 6] – instrumentation
  • The Picard Brothers[note 7] – instrumentation
  • Jr Blender – instrumentation
  • Jacob Olofsson – instrumentation
  • Frank van Essen – arrangement, violin, strings
  • Sean Paul – vocals
  • Ciara O'Connor – backing vocals
  • Naomi Scarlett – backing vocals
  • William Bowerman – musical director, arranger, drums
  • Matthew Carroll – bass guitar, keyboards
  • Kai Smith – guitar, keyboards

Technical

  • ADP – production, engineering, programming
  • Stephen Kozmeniuk – production, drum programming, programming
  • Jamie Snell – mixing
  • Chris Gehringer – mastering
  • Matty Green – mixing
  • John Davis – mastering
  • Banx & Ranx[note 5] – production, programming
  • Yong In Choi – engineering
  • Calvin Harris – production, mixing
  • Mike Marsh – mastering
  • Silk City[note 6] – production, programming
  • The Picard Brothers[note 7] – additional production, programming
  • Jarami[note 8] – additional production, programming
  • Riton – additional production
  • Alex Metric – additional production
  • Jr Blender – additional production, programming
  • Josh Gudwin – mixing
  • Hunter Jackson – mixing assistance
  • Will Quinnell – mastering assistance
  • Martin Garrix – production, engineering
  • Giorgio Tuinfort – production
  • Valley Girl – production
  • Lorna Blackwood – production
  • Cameron Gower-Poole – engineering
  • JP Negrete – engineering
  • Sermstyle – production
  • Pip Kembo – co-production
  • Paul Bailey – engineering
  • James Royo – mixing
  • Barry Grint – mastering
  • Jay Reynolds – production, mixing
  • William Bowerman – co-production
  • Will Nicholson – engineering, recording, front of house
  • Jon Bond – backline technician
  • Alex Cerutti – monitors
  • Richie Mills – backline technician

Charts

[edit]

Certifications

[edit]
Certifications and sales
Region Certification Certified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[350] Platinum 70,000
Austria (IFPI Austria)[351] Platinum 15,000
Belgium (BRMA)[352] Platinum 30,000
Brazil (Pro-Música Brasil)[277] 3× Platinum 120,000
Canada (Music Canada)[262] 6× Platinum 480,000
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[353] 2× Platinum 40,000
France (SNEP)[354] 2× Platinum 200,000
Germany (BVMI)[355] Gold 100,000
Ireland (IRMA)[356] Platinum 15,000^
Italy (FIMI)[357] 2× Platinum 100,000
Netherlands (NVPI)[358] Platinum 40,000
New Zealand (RMNZ)[359] 4× Platinum 60,000
Norway (IFPI Norway)[276] 4× Platinum 80,000
Poland (ZPAV)[360] Gold 10,000
Singapore (RIAS)[361] 2× Platinum 20,000*
Sweden (GLF)[362] Gold 20,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[363] 4× Platinum 1,200,000
United States (RIAA)[260] Platinum 1,000,000

* Sales figures based on certification alone.
^ Shipments figures based on certification alone.
Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

Release history

[edit]
Release dates and formats
Region Date Format(s) Edition Label Ref.
Various 2 June 2017 Standard Warner [364]
  • CD
  • digital download
  • streaming
Deluxe
Japan CD Japanese standard [165]
Italy 20 October 2017 Special [163]
Japan 25 April 2018 Japanese special [166]
Various 19 October 2018
  • CD
  • digital download
  • LP
  • streaming
Complete [365]
Japan CD Japanese complete [185]

See also

[edit]

Footnotes

[edit]

References

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Dua Lipa is the debut studio album by English-Albanian singer and songwriter , released on 2 June 2017 by Warner Bros. Records. The record is a sleek pop effort blending with , , and R&B influences, co-written by Lipa alongside producers including and Koz. It features guest contributions from Miguel on "Lost in Your Light" and on "Homesick," and its standard edition comprises 12 tracks, while the deluxe version adds three more. The album produced eight singles, most notably the UK number-one "New Rules," as well as top-10 hits "IDGAF" and "Be the One." Upon release, Dua Lipa debuted at number three on the , where it has since spent 424 weeks as of November 2025, and reached number 27 on the US 200. As of October 2025, the album had been certified four-times platinum by the (BPI) for sales and streams exceeding 1.2 million units in the UK, and platinum by the (RIAA) on June 28, 2019, for 1 million equivalent units in the US. Globally, it has sold over 14 million equivalent album units as of September 2025 and received additional certifications, including double platinum in and , and gold in . Critically, the album was praised for Lipa's confident vocals and its club-oriented sound, earning a spot among Rolling Stone's 20 best pop albums of and helping establish her as a rising pop force.

Development

Background

Dua Lipa was born in London to Kosovar Albanian parents but moved with her family to Pristina, Kosovo, at age 11, where she lived for four years before returning to London alone at 15 in 2010 to pursue a music career. Upon her return, she began uploading covers of artists like Chance the Rapper and Rihanna to SoundCloud and YouTube, which garnered attention from industry professionals. In 2014, at age 19, she signed a recording contract with Warner Bros. Records after label executives discovered her online demos and covers. Following her signing, Lipa released her self-titled debut EP in 2015, featuring early tracks that introduced her sultry vocals and pop sensibilities, followed by EP 2 in 2016, which included remixes and additional material to expand her sound. These releases, alongside standalone singles like "New Love" in August 2015 and "Be the One" in October 2015, began building her profile across , with "Be the One" achieving top-10 status in countries including , the , and . The success of these early singles prompted Warner Bros. to shift focus toward a full-length debut album, capitalizing on Lipa's growing fanbase and streaming traction. The album's concept—aiming for a blend of with R&B edges—was solidified in early , as Lipa sought to establish a cohesive artistic identity beyond standalone tracks. Lipa's relocation to immersed her in a dynamic music environment that shaped her style, drawing from 90s and 2000s pop icons such as and , whose bold aesthetics and empowering anthems informed her approach to modern pop. This foundational period transitioned into structured writing sessions, setting the stage for the album's creation.

Writing process

The songwriting for Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album began with early sessions in between January and March 2016, where the focus was on establishing foundations through collaborative efforts with producers and writers. These initial meetings laid the groundwork for the album's energetic sound, drawing on Lipa's emerging style influenced by pop and R&B elements. Lipa actively participated in these sessions, contributing ideas that shaped the project's direction. Subsequent writing sessions took place in and , where Lipa incorporated more personal experiences, such as reflections on relationships, into the lyrics. This phase allowed for greater emotional depth, as Lipa drew from her life to co-create tracks with writers like , who collaborated on "Homesick" alongside . The process emphasized iteration, with Lipa co-writing 10 of the 12 tracks on the standard edition, ensuring her voice was central to the album's narrative. Specific songs originated during these sessions, including "," which was written in a single collaborative session by , , and before being offered to Lipa. Similarly, "IDGAF" evolved from earlier demos, with Lipa joining writers , Joe Kirkland, and Larzz Principato to refine its post-breakup theme into a defiant . Max contributed to the writing and production of "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)," blending polished pop hooks with Lipa's input during Los Angeles sessions. These efforts highlighted Lipa's role in blending commercial appeal with authentic storytelling across the album.

Recording and production

The recording of Dua Lipa's debut album primarily took place at The Gift Shop in and MXM Studios in . Key producers included , who oversaw several tracks. The bulk of the recording sessions occurred from April 2016 to early 2017, with final mixes completed in March 2017 ahead of the album's June release. Production emphasized a blend of electronic and organic elements to craft a retro-modern sound, featuring prominent use of synthesizers and drum machines alongside live instrumentation such as guitars and bass for added depth and texture. This approach allowed for dynamic arrangements that balanced polished pop structures with subtle live-feel grooves across the tracklist. One notable production decision involved the track "Be the One", which was initially released as a single in late 2015 and included on the album following its international success to better integrate with the overall sonic palette.

Music and lyrics

Musical style

Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album is primarily characterized as a dance-pop and synth-pop record, incorporating elements of R&B, disco, and new wave. The sound is sleek and confident, blending glossy electronic production with Lipa's husky vocals to create anthemic, club-ready tracks that emphasize empowerment and attitude. Critics noted its polished, upbeat vibe, drawing comparisons to contemporary pop with a focus on infectious hooks and rhythmic drive. The album's influences fuse 1980s synth sounds—evoking the era's shimmering keyboards and new wave edges—with 2010s EDM production techniques, resulting in a modern yet nostalgic electronic palette. This hybrid approach is evident in the use of layered synths and pulsating rhythms that update retro aesthetics for dance floors, as seen in tracks like "Hotter Than Hell," which channels 80s-inspired grooves through contemporary beats. The production, handled by teams like , prioritizes a clean, high-energy mix that bridges vintage pop flair with current electronic trends. Most tracks fall within a tempo range of 100–120 BPM, underscoring the album's emphasis on upbeat, danceable rhythms suitable for both radio and clubs. features prominent basslines and electronic beats as foundational elements, providing a driving pulse, while occasional acoustic guitars add textural contrast in more introspective moments, such as on "Homesick." This combination crafts a cohesive sonic landscape that balances high-octane energy with subtle organic touches. The standard edition of the album runs for a total of 41:02, comprising 12 tracks that maintain a tight, focused runtime ideal for pop consumption.

Lyrical themes

The lyrics of Dua Lipa's self-titled debut center on themes of , heartbreak, self-confidence, and the dynamics of modern relationships, often drawing from the singer's personal encounters with romance and emotional vulnerability. Lipa has described the record as focusing on " and being proud of who you are," reflecting her intent to craft anthems that celebrate resilience amid relational turmoil. This is evident in tracks that transform pain into strength, emphasizing female agency in and recovery. Recurring motifs include breakup anthems that promote boundaries and self-protection, such as "New Rules," where Lipa lays out three guidelines for avoiding an ex-partner to aid healing and prevent relapse into toxic cycles. Similarly, "Hotter Than Hell" embodies and post-heartbreak glow-up, with Lipa asserting her allure and independence after being undervalued in a relationship. These elements underscore a of turning personal setbacks into sources of empowerment, influenced by Lipa's reflections on fame's impact on her romantic life after signing with Warner Bros. Records in 2014. She has shared that recollections of "terrible" and "manipulative" ex-boyfriends fuel her writing, allowing her to channel real experiences into lyrics that resonate with listeners navigating similar struggles. Lipa delivers these themes through her , employing a confident and assertive style that amplifies the songs' bold messages of self-assurance. The album's predominantly English-language feature repetitive, hook-driven structures tailored for pop's , making complex emotions like longing and liberation immediately relatable and chantable.

Song analyses

The album's standard edition comprises 12 tracks, opening with the atmospheric intro "Genesis" and closing with the reflective "Homesick". Composed primarily in minor and major keys with tempos ranging from 88 to 124 BPM, the songs blend pop structures with electronic and acoustic elements, emphasizing hooks and dynamic builds. Deluxe and regional editions add bonus tracks like "Last Dance", "Room 4 Two", and "Good in Bed" for expanded listening. "Genesis" (3:28, , 113 BPM) serves as a cinematic opener, featuring spoken declarations over swelling synths and percussive builds that transition into the album's energetic vibe, setting a tone of bold self-introduction without traditional verses. "Lost in Your Light" (feat. Miguel) (3:23, , 104 BPM) is a funky, horn-accented R&B track with a verse-chorus structure, highlighting the collaborators' chemistry through soulful vocals and groovy basslines that evoke a sense of romantic immersion. "Hotter than Hell" (3:08, , 110 BPM) incorporates rhythms in its verse-chorus format, featuring a sultry vocal delivery over reggae-infused synths and a bridge that intensifies with added percussion for a summery, hook-laden feel. "Be the One" (3:22, , 97 BPM) adopts a mid-tempo groove with R&B undertones, built on a simple verse-pre-chorus-chorus progression that emphasizes Lipa's breathy vocals and subtle electronic flourishes for an intimate yet danceable atmosphere. "IDGAF" (2:37, , 97 BPM) stands out with its defiant post-breakup energy, driven by a prominent guitar in the chorus and a trap-influenced beat, structuring tension through minimal verses that explode into a full-band drop. "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)" (2:30, , 110 BPM) delivers unapologetic pop punch in a compact form, with a bold verse-chorus setup featuring kiss-sound effects and sassy ad-libs that amplify its confident, in-your-face attitude. "Garden" (3:47, , 102 BPM) unfolds as a sensual mid-tempo track with orchestral strings and a verse-bridge-chorus arc, highlighting Lipa's emotive range in a lush, romantic composition. "No Goodbyes" (3:36, , 124 BPM) is a high-energy EDM-pop with an Ibiza-style build from verses to explosive drops, incorporating vocal chops and pulsating synths for a party-ready vibe. "Thinking 'Bout You" (2:51, , 111 BPM) begins as an acoustic-leaning track before erupting into electronic pop, its structure shifting from stripped-down verses to a vibrant chorus with witty vocal layers and building synths. "New Rules" (3:29, , 116 BPM) follows with a rule-based delivered in a , its structure highlighting a pre-chorus breakdown leading to an anthemic , bolstered by influences and crisp production. "Begging" (3:14, , 88 BPM) features a slower, atmospheric build with echoing synths and pleading vocals in a verse-chorus format, exploring vulnerability in relationships through minimalistic production. "Homesick" (3:50, , 114 BPM), the , is a piano-led with , structured as a heartfelt with alternating verses and harmonious choruses that evoke raw emotion through minimalistic production. The Japanese edition appends additional bonuses beyond the standard tracks.

Marketing and release

Title and artwork

The album is titled Dua Lipa, an eponymous choice intended to emphasize the artist's identity and personal vision for the project. Lipa has described the self-titled approach as a way to ensure the album fully represents her, stating, "This album is a representation of who I am. I only get one chance at a debut." The decision was finalized in late 2016, amid ongoing development and delays to the release schedule. The features Lipa in a black outfit posed confidently against a bold background, adopting a minimalist aesthetic that underscores the album's confident pop tone. This visual was selected to align with the album's branding, following an initial version shot by photographer Nicole Nodland that was replaced due to fan feedback. The final artwork was revealed on August 24, 2016, coinciding with the announcement of pre-orders and the single "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)." The inner artwork includes various photos of Lipa in casual and artistic poses, contributing to the personal and intimate feel of the package.

Release formats

The debut album Dua Lipa was released by Records, following delays from its originally planned 2016 launch due to the success of preceding singles like "Be the One". The standard edition features 12 tracks and was issued digitally and in physical formats worldwide on 2 June 2017. A deluxe edition expanded the tracklist to 17 songs by adding bonus material, including "Places" and "Bad Together", and was made available in select markets such as on 9 June 2017. On 19 October 2018, Warner Bros. Records issued the Complete Edition, a comprising 25 tracks in total, adding eight additional tracks including remixes, previous collaborations, B-sides, and three new songs ("Want To", "Running", and "Kiss and Make Up"). The album appeared in multiple physical and digital formats to accommodate various distribution methods, including (CD), vinyl (LP), cassette, digital download, and streaming services.
EditionRelease DateTrack CountKey FormatsNotes
Standard2 June 201712CD, LP, digital download, streamingWorldwide release
Deluxe9 June 201717CD, digital download, streamingSelect markets (e.g., Japan) with bonus tracks
Complete19 October 2018252×CD, 3×LP, digital download, streamingSuper deluxe reissue with remixes and new material

Initial promotion

The self-titled debut album by Dua Lipa was teased in early 2017, with the release date confirmed as June 2 following delays to incorporate additional tracks. The tracklist was revealed in April 2017, highlighting a mix of previously released singles and new material, including the collaboration "Lost in Your Light" with Miguel. This announcement came amid a promotional strategy that emphasized Lipa's growing catalog of singles, with six tracks charting simultaneously by March 2017 to sustain momentum. Pre-release hype was built through promotional singles like "Thinking 'Bout You," released in January 2017 to showcase the album's emotional depth. Immediately following the album's launch, "" emerged as a key single on July 7, 2017, amplifying visibility with its directed by Henry Scholfield. The video's narrative of women supporting each other through a breakup resonated widely, driving streams and social engagement to extend the album's reach. Lipa bolstered promotion through high-profile media appearances, including a March 22, 2017, performance of "" alongside on Starring , marking her introduction to U.S. audiences. Digital efforts included targeted playlist placements and social media teasers that capitalized on her existing singles, fostering fan interaction in the lead-up to release. The campaign integrated with live events via the and Tour, announced in January 2017 and kicking off in February, where Lipa previewed album tracks during intimate venues. A March 1, 2017, show at New York's , for instance, featured performances of "Hotter Than Hell" and emerging material, allowing early fans to experience the record's energy firsthand and generate word-of-mouth buzz.

Promotion and performances

Singles

The promotion of Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album began with several pre-release singles in 2015 and 2016, establishing her presence in the music industry. "Be the One", released on 30 October 2015, marked her breakthrough, peaking at number 9 on the UK Singles Chart and earning a triple platinum certification in the UK for over 1.8 million units. "Hotter Than Hell", issued on 6 May 2016, followed as a promotional single, reaching number 15 on the UK Singles Chart and achieving platinum status in the UK. "Blow Your Mind (Mwah)", released on 18 November 2016, peaked at number 22 on the UK Singles Chart and was certified platinum in the UK. The album's lead single, "", was released on 7 July 2017, shortly after the album's June launch, and became its defining track. It topped the UK Singles Chart for three weeks, marking Lipa's first number-one single there, and peaked at number 6 on the Hot 100. The song received a 9× platinum certification from the RIAA in the , denoting 9 million units sold or streamed as of 2025. Its , directed by Henry Scholfield, features Lipa and backup dancers in a hotel setting, visually reinforcing the song's themes of self-empowerment and setting boundaries post-breakup. Post-album singles from the standard edition included "IDGAF", released on 12 January 2018, which peaked at number 3 on the UK Singles Chart and was certified triple platinum in the UK. "Homesick", a collaboration with , followed on 25 May 2018 as the final single, reaching number 19 on the UK Singles Chart and certified silver in the UK. "Last Dance" was issued as a promotional single on 9 October 2017, while "Thinking 'Bout You" served as a single in select markets, topping the chart in . These releases contributed significantly to the album's chart longevity and commercial success.
SingleRelease DateUK PeakUS Peak (Hot 100)Certifications
"Be the One"30 October 20159: 3×
"Hotter Than Hell"6 May 201615:
"Blow Your Mind (Mwah)"18 November 201622:
"New Rules"7 July 201716: 4× ; : 9×
"IDGAF"12 January 2018371: 3×
"Homesick"25 May 201819: Silver

Live performances

Dua Lipa debuted several tracks from her self-titled album at the on June 23, 2017, performing songs including "Hotter Than Hell," "Be the One," and "Lost in Your Light" to one of the festival's largest crowds that day. In September 2017, she presented a near-complete playthrough of the album during her set at the in , featuring renditions of "," "IDGAF," "Hotter Than Hell," and other cuts from the record. The singer brought album material to television audiences in early 2018, starting with her debut on on February 3, where she performed "New Rules" amid a minimalist setup emphasizing the song's empowering and . She followed this with an appearance on on February 13, delivering a high-energy version of "New Rules" backed by dancers that highlighted the track's elements. At the 2018 Brit Awards on February 21, Lipa opened with a medley incorporating "IDGAF" alongside "New Rules" and "Hotter Than Hell," staged as a girl-power anthem with synchronized dancers to underscore themes of independence. Later that month, she visited BBC Radio 1's Live Lounge for two sessions: on February 14, performing an acoustic rendition of "New Rules" paired with a cover mashup of Arctic Monkeys' "Do I Wanna Know?" to blend her pop style with indie influences; and on February 21, reinterpreting "IDGAF" with guest vocalists Charli XCX, Zara Larsson, MØ, and Alma, creating a collaborative "supergroup" performance that amplified the song's defiant message.

Tour integrations

The served as the primary live vehicle for promoting the album, commencing on October 5, 2017, in Brighton, England, and concluding on December 10, 2018, in , encompassing over 100 dates across , , , and . The setlists were overwhelmingly dominated by tracks from the album, with staples such as "IDGAF" (performed 100 times), "" (101 times), "Hotter Than Hell" (98 times), and "Be the One" (96 times) forming the core of the show, often comprising 80-90% of the performance alongside select pre-album singles like "." This structure allowed Lipa to showcase the album's energy in arena and theater settings, emphasizing high-energy medleys and transitions between songs like "Dreams" into "No Lie." Festival appearances during this period further integrated full segments of the album into larger bills. At Lollapalooza Chicago on August 4, 2018, Lipa's setlist highlighted album cuts including "Lost in Your Light," "Be the One," "IDGAF," "Hotter Than Hell," and "New Rules," blending them with covers and collaborations to create a cohesive showcase of the record's material amid the festival format. Similar integrations occurred at Lollapalooza Paris and Berlin earlier that summer, where album tracks anchored the majority of her 10-12 song sets, reinforcing the tour's focus on the debut's hits. As Lipa's career progressed, the album's integration into live shows evolved to include retrospective elements in subsequent tours. During her six-night residency at London's in May 2022, part of the , she revisited self-titled tracks like "New Rules" and "Be the One" amid newer material, providing nostalgic highlights for fans. Overall setlist composition shifted over time; while early tours like the Self-Titled run featured roughly 80% album songs, later outings mixed in tracks from and beyond, reducing the debut's dominance to 20-30% of the lineup. Notably, the Japan-exclusive bonus track "" was performed infrequently, appearing in only 91 of Lipa's 411 documented shows since 2017, a rarity attributed to its regional availability and setlist constraints.

Critical reception

Contemporary reviews

Upon its release in June 2017, Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album received generally positive reviews from music critics, who highlighted its polished production and the singer's emerging presence in contemporary pop. The album holds a score of 72 out of 100, based on 8 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception. Critics frequently praised the album's catchy hooks, infectious energy, and Lipa's charismatic delivery, which blended with R&B influences. awarded it four out of five stars (equivalent to 80/100), lauding it as a "sass-packed, honest, uncompromising storm" that positioned Lipa as a potential superstar through its bold, rooftop-shouting confidence. Similarly, gave it 8 out of 10, commending the "intriguing cocktail of emotions" from vulnerability to empowerment, driven by Lipa's versatile vocals and sharp songwriting. In the UK, where Lipa had built significant buzz, outlets like The Evening Standard echoed this enthusiasm, calling it a "confident debut" full of summery bangers that showcased her poise beyond her years. Some reviews offered mixed assessments, critiquing the album for occasionally relying on formulaic pop structures despite its strengths. The Guardian rated it three out of five stars (60/100), appreciating the "uplifting" hooks and Lipa's soulful range but noting a certain predictability in its nonchalance-heavy approach to modern pop tropes. In the US, where the album debuted to more modest chart success and fewer immediate reviews, coverage was similarly tempered; Spectrum Pulse assigned it 7 out of 10, praising the solid pop execution but suggesting it lacked groundbreaking innovation to fully stand out. Overall, UK critics tended toward stronger praise for Lipa's homegrown appeal and charisma, while US responses were more reserved, focusing on its competent but unadventurous fit within the pop landscape.

Retrospective assessments

In the years following its 2017 release, Dua Lipa's self-titled debut has been reevaluated by s as a foundational work that showcased her early command of and , blending sultry vocals with electronic production to create anthemic tracks centered on and . The Complete Edition , which added tracks like "Want To" and collaborations such as "" with Silk City, prompted fresh discussions on the 's evolution, with reviewers noting how the expansions amplified its thematic focus on romantic resilience and sonic experimentation without diluting the original's cohesive energy. Album of the Year aggregated user and feedback post-reissue, describing it as a "generic yet enjoyable" pop staple from 2016-2017 that holds up better than contemporaries due to its hit-driven structure. Academic analyses in feminist have examined the album's themes, particularly in songs like "," which employs a rule-based narrative to critique toxic relationships and promote self-confidence, positioning Lipa as a voice for modern female agency in pop. A 2020 cultural analysis framed "" as a nostalgic yet contemporary feminist text, drawing on historical musical references to empower young women through protest against patriarchal norms. Marking the album's fifth anniversary in 2022, media outlets reflected on its lasting freshness and underrated status, with Music Musings & Such calling it an "underrated" debut that received mixed initial reactions but endures as vibrant pop, its tracks still resonant in live sets and playlists. covered Lipa's personal retrospective, where she expressed pride in the album's role as a "stepping stone" that launched her global career, underscoring its influence on subsequent works. By 2023-2025, assessments continued to highlight the album's influence on pop's empowerment narrative, with Billboard's 2024 chart analysis crediting debut singles like and "IDGAF" as enduring top-10 hits that laid the groundwork for Lipa's chart dominance. In broader career overviews, the record is now viewed as a pivotal debut that fused R&B-inflected pop with dance elements, inspiring a wave of confident, genre-blending female artists.

Commercial performance

Chart performance

Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album, released in June 2017, achieved strong chart performance across multiple territories, reflecting its growing popularity through singles success. In the United Kingdom, it debuted at number five on the Official Albums Chart with first-week sales of 16,223 units before climbing to a peak of number three in early 2018, driven by the breakout of "New Rules." The album has demonstrated remarkable longevity, accumulating 424 weeks on the UK chart as of September 2025 and continuing to chart, establishing it as the longest-charting female debut album in UK history. In the United States, the album entered the at number 86 in June 2017 and later reached its peak position of number 27 in February 2018, bolstered by streaming gains from lead singles. Internationally, the album entered the top 10 in 15 countries, including number eight in , number two in , and top-five peaks in Ireland, the , and , among others. The 2018 Complete Edition reissue, featuring additional collaborations, prompted a re-entry into the UK Top 40 and boosted its positions on European charts. By 2020, sustained streaming from hits like "IDGAF" led to further re-entries on national album charts amid Lipa's rising profile. Into 2025, ongoing streaming revivals have kept the album active on global platforms, with over 14 billion total streams on alone as of November 2025, frequently appearing in daily global album rankings.

Sales and certifications

The debut Dua Lipa has accumulated over 14 million equivalent album units worldwide as of September 2025, driven significantly by streaming consumption. On streaming platforms, the surpassed 14 billion streams on Spotify by July 2025, further bolstering its equivalent sales figures. The has received numerous certifications across regions, reflecting its commercial success.
RegionCertificationUnits SoldCertifying BodyDate
Australia3× Platinum210,000ARIAMay 2021
Brazil3× Platinum120,0002020
Canada3× Platinum240,000April 2021
ItalyPlatinum50,000FIMI2018
PolandGold10,000ZPAVOctober 3, 2018
United Kingdom4× Platinum1,200,000BPIOctober 3, 2025
United StatesPlatinum1,000,000RIAAJune 28, 2019
It ranked 42nd on the year-end albums in and ninth in 2018.

Track listings and personnel

Standard and deluxe editions

The standard edition of Dua Lipa's self-titled debut , released on June 2, , by Records, contains 12 tracks co-written primarily by Lipa in collaboration with various songwriters. The songwriting and production credits reflect contributions from established pop producers, emphasizing Lipa's role in crafting the album's sound.
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)
1."Genesis"Dua Lipa, Sarah Hudson, Clarence Coffee Jr., Ferras Al-Qaisi, Christy "Zee" ZakariasAxident
2."Lost in Your Light" (featuring Miguel)Dua Lipa, Miguel, Jonny Coffer, Francesco Yates, Stephen KozmeniukMiguel, Koz
3."Hotter than Hell"Dua Lipa, Max Martin, ShellbackMax Martin, Shellback
4."Be the One"Lucy Taylor, Jack Tarrant, Digital Farm AnimalsDigital Farm Animals, Jack Tarrant
5."IDGAF"Dua Lipa, Ian Kirkpatrick, Chelcee GrimesIan Kirkpatrick
6."Blow Your Mind (Mwah)"Dua Lipa, Rami Yacoub, Tove LoRami Yacoub
7."Garden" (featuring Sia)Dua Lipa, Sia Furler, Chris BraideChris Braide
8."No Goodbyes"Dua Lipa, Lindy Robbins, Ilsey Juber, GradesKoz, Grades
9."Thinking 'Bout You"Dua Lipa, Stephen Kozmeniuk, Adam ArgyleKoz
10."New Rules"Dua Lipa, Emily Warren, Ian KirkpatrickIan Kirkpatrick
11."Homesick"Dua Lipa, Chris MartinBill Rahko
12."Dreams"Dua Lipa, Ben RiceBen Rice
The deluxe edition, also released on June 2, 2017, extends the standard tracklist with three additional songs, maintaining the album's pop sensibilities, with Lipa contributing to the writing.
No.TitleWriter(s)Producer(s)
13."Places", Scott Culcombe, Jonathan Asher
14."Bad Together", Tom Barnes, Pete Kelleher, Ben Kohn, TMS
15."Room for 2", Tom Neville, Autumn RoweTom Neville
Personnel credits for both editions highlight Lipa's lead vocals throughout, supported by background vocals from contributors such as Lucy Taylor on select tracks and Sia on "." Mixing was handled by at MixStar Studios, with engineering by John Hanes, Cameron Gower Poole, and Jeff Gunnell; mastering by at Sterling Sound. Instrumentation includes guitars by Jack Tarrant and StarGate (Tor Erik Hermansen and Mikkel Storleer Eriksen) on multiple tracks, bass and drums by Miguel on "Lost in Your Light," and additional production elements like programming by on "IDGAF" and "."

Complete Edition additions

The Complete Edition of Dua Lipa's debut album was released on October 19, 2018, expanding the previous deluxe version to a total of 25 tracks across two discs. This reissue incorporated eight additional tracks on the second disc, comprising two previously unreleased songs, a B-side from earlier sessions, and five hit collaborations that had been issued as standalone singles between 2017 and 2018. The new tracks included "Want To" and "Running," both originally recorded during the album's 2016–2017 production sessions but held back as vaulted material until this release. "Want To" features production by ADP and Stephen "KOZ" Kozmeniuk, with its creation tied to a promotional partnership allowing fans to generate custom remixes via Jaguar's I-PACE vehicle technology. "Running," produced by KOZ, draws on electropop elements from the album's core sound, written by Lipa alongside Andrew Wyatt. The B-side "Japanese Denim," initially released in 2017 as a companion to the single "Be the One," was produced by Jim Eliot and added here to round out early-era rarities. Complementing these were high-profile collaborations such as "Kiss and Make Up" with BLACKPINK, produced by Sir Nolan and Teddy Park; "One Kiss" with Calvin Harris, handled by Harris himself; "Electricity" with Silk City (Mark Ronson and Diplo), produced by Ronson, Diplo, and Joshua Gudwin; "Scared to Be Lonely" with Martin Garrix, produced by Garrix and Gesaffelstein; and "No Lie" with Sean Paul, produced by Stern and Jaycen Joshua. This edition was issued in both physical two-CD format and digital download/streaming, featuring updated artwork that depicted Lipa in a metallic, scale-patterned jacket against a dark background, emphasizing a more mature visual evolution from the original cover. The served primarily to archive and consolidate Lipa's vaulted recordings and external hits from the 2016–2017 period into a comprehensive package, bridging her debut era with subsequent successes without altering the core album sequence on disc one.

Production credits

The production of Dua Lipa's self-titled debut album involved a collaborative team of engineers and support staff, with mixing handled exclusively by Serban Ghenea across all tracks. Ghenea, known for his work on numerous pop recordings, was assisted in engineering by John Hanes, who contributed to the polished sound of the final mixes. Mastering for the album was performed by Chris Gehringer at Sterling Sound in New York, ensuring consistent audio quality suitable for various formats. The A&R direction was led by Joe Kentish at Warner Records, who signed Lipa in 2014 and guided the project's development from inception to release. Notable guest contributions included of , who provided additional vocals and piano on the track "Homesick," adding an emotive layer to the . Track-specific production assignments are outlined in the standard and deluxe editions section.

Legacy

Accolades

The debut studio album Dua Lipa garnered significant recognition, contributing to several high-profile awards and nominations for the artist in the years following its 2017 release. At the 2018 Brit Awards, won the British Breakthrough Act, honoring her emergence as a major talent propelled by the album's singles like "New Rules" and "Be the One," and the British Female Solo Artist, acknowledging her standout performance in the UK music scene. The album's impact extended to the international stage, with Dua Lipa receiving the Grammy Award for Best New Artist at the in , a category that celebrated her debut as a transformative entry into . In retrospective rankings, the album has been acknowledged for its role in shaping pop, appearing in NME's extended of the best albums of the decade in and featured in similar "best pop albums" compilations by the publication in subsequent years up to 2024. Overall, the project is linked to over 15 nominations and at least five wins across major ceremonies, underscoring its foundational influence on Lipa's career.

Cultural impact

The self-titled debut album by Dua Lipa, released in 2017, significantly influenced the landscape of pop music by emphasizing themes of female empowerment and independence, positioning Lipa as a key figure in the genre's evolution toward more assertive female narratives. Tracks such as "New Rules" emerged as anthems for personal boundaries and self-respect, aligning closely with the burgeoning #MeToo movement, during which Lipa publicly addressed sexism and harassment in the music industry, highlighting the challenges women face in gaining recognition for their creative work. Her advocacy amplified the album's resonance, as she noted the importance of the movement in empowering women across entertainment sectors to share their experiences. The visual and performative elements of the album, particularly the choreography in the "New Rules" music video, have had a lasting impact on and digital culture, inspiring coordinated routines and style trends that emphasize confident, . This choreography saw a notable revival on platforms in the , with users recreating its synchronized moves in viral challenges that blend pop aesthetics with contemporary expression. Lipa's bold, minimalist outfits in the video—featuring sleek and monochromatic looks—further influenced and performance , promoting an image of unapologetic that echoed the album's lyrical focus on from toxic relationships. By 2025, marking the album's eighth anniversary since its June release, it continued to drive Lipa's global stardom, underpinning her transition from emerging artist to arena headliner capable of selling out venues like . The project's enduring appeal among younger listeners, including Gen Z, stems from its streaming accessibility and thematic relevance to ongoing conversations about and resilience in pop culture.

References

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