Upon release, Smile received mixed reviews from music critics, who noted that the album is one of Perry's solid efforts but criticized its familiar lyrics and production. Commercially, Smile reached the top five in Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, the United States, and the top 10 in Austria, Ireland, and Italy.
Background and conception
Katy Perry stated she was struggling with
situational depression in 2017, following the underperformance of her fifth studio album Witness, public criticism of her,[2] and breakup with then-boyfriend and current fiancé
Orlando Bloom; she conceived Smile during this period.[3][4][5] In March 2018,
Ian Kirkpatrick announced he had worked with Perry on new music. In an interview with The Fader, he stated: "We did a couple of days and she is amazing." He further stated that working with Perry was "someone I've wanted to work with my whole life, and she was literally the most normal, no-ego person."[6] In 2019, she released the singles "
Never Really Over",[7] "
Small Talk"[8] and "
Harleys in Hawaii".[9]
In March 2020, Perry revealed her pregnancy with Bloom, via the music video for her single "
Never Worn White".[10] The pregnancy influenced Smile as well.[4][5] Perry also announced her intentions of releasing "a lot" of new music during the year's summer.[11] In May, she announced "
Daisies" as the
lead single of her new album.[12][13] The same month,
Amazon Alexa announced the album's release date as August 14, 2020.[14][15] In a June 2020 interview with Billboard, Perry discussed a new song, titled "Teary Eyes".[16] She later confirmed the following month that "Never Really Over" would be on the album.[7] The same month, the album's title was confirmed as Smile, after
one of the songs on the album.[17]
Theme and artwork
Perry explained that Smile is about "finding the light at the end of the tunnel", and taking back your smile, and that the album comes from a place where she fell in after her career and relationship with Orlando Bloom hit a low point back in 2017. She discussed struggles with depression and suicidal thoughts, and stated that gratitude is what saved her life.[18] Perry also defined the album as her "journey towards the light, with stories of resilience, hope, and love".[19] The album's artwork features Perry as "a glum clown with a red nose and a blue and white checkered suit above the title, Smile".[20] The fan edition comes with a
lenticular cover.[21]
Release and promotion
The singer unveiled the cover artwork of Smile via a
Twitter game that involved her fans/followers tweeting about the album to "pop virtual balloons in order to uncover" the album cover.[20] On July 27, 2020, she announced that the album release date had been pushed back two weeks due to "unavoidable production delays".[22] In August 2020, she announced a limited edition collection of vinyl picture discs and alternative CD packaging for the album. Five alternative covers/vinyl picture discs were available for pre-order for a period of 5 days.[23]Smile was also released as a bone white
vinyl,[24] a
picture disc,[25] a
cassette,[26] and a limited
deluxe editionCD with a
lenticular cover,[27] titled the "Fan edition."[28]
Smile was released on August 28, 2020. A series of animated music videos titled The Smile Video Series was released, which featured animated music videos for seven songs from Smile. Each video showcased a different style of animation, with one being released each day between August 26 and September 1, 2020.[29] On November 9, 2020, Perry performed "Never Really Over" and "Not the End of the World" as a part of her setlist for the
TMall Double 11 Gala.[30][31] She performed "
Only Love" with
Darius Rucker at the
American Music Awards of 2020 on November 22, 2020. It marked her first televised performance after giving birth to her first child, Daisy Dove Bloom.[32] A remix of the track "
Cry About It Later", featuring
Luísa Sonza and
Bruno Martini, was released on April 24, 2021, alongside a lyric video. She also included the solo version of song in her setlist at the Lazada Super Party.[33] Many songs from the album were performed at Perry's 2021–2023
Las Vegas residency,
Play. Perry performed "Tucked" and "Teary Eyes" for first time at
Rock in Rio on September 20, 2024.
Singles
Throughout 2019 and 2020, Perry released four solo songs, originally marketed as standalone singles. "
Never Really Over", released on May 31, 2019, was announced to be on Smile by Perry in June 2020.[7] "
Harleys in Hawaii" was revealed to be on the standard track list upon the release of the album pre-order.[34] "
Small Talk" and "
Never Worn White" did not make the standard track list, but ended up as bonus tracks on the "Fan" and Japanese editions of the album.[28]
"
Daisies" was released on May 15, 2020, as the album's lead single.[35] It debuted at number 40 on the US
Billboard Hot 100.[36] "
Smile", the title track, was released as the second single on July 10, 2020, along with the album pre-order.[37] Perry then released "
What Makes a Woman" as a promotional single ahead of the album, on August 20, 2020.[38] She released an acoustic version exclusive to her
Vevo page on the same day,[39] and revealed that the track is dedicated to her daughter.[40]
"
Cry About It Later" was released as a promotional single for the record on August 28, 2020.[41] In April 2021, Perry released a remix of this song with Brazilian DJ, Bruno Martini, who remixed the song and featured vocals from Brazilian singer
Luísa Sonza. On November 17, 2020, a remix of "
Resilient" featuring
Tiësto and
Aitana was released as the album's second promotional single.[42] A music video was released for the remix on the same day, and is a part of the Open To Better campaign by
Coca-Cola.[43] "
Not the End of the World" was released on December 21, 2020, as the third and final single from the album. A music video for the track was released to YouTube on the same day, which stars
Zooey Deschanel.[44]
Smile received mixed reviews from critics, who deemed it a "relatively solid album", but criticized its familiar sound and "cliched" lyrics.[56] At
Metacritic, which assigns a
normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from publications, the Smile received a
weighted average score of 58, based on 18 reviews, indicating "mixed or average reviews".[46]AnyDecentMusic? gave the album 5.3 out of 10, based on their assessment of the critical consensus.[45]
Lindsay Zolandz of The New York Times thought that Smile tries to add brightness to the dark, with a lightness that was absent in its predecessor, Witness (2017).[57] Mark Kennedy of Chicago Tribune deemed the album a course-correction that sets Perry back into pure
pop, and labeled most of the album "bit of a bummer" due its apologetic tone.[4] The i newspaper's Joe Muggs complimented the restrained production and Perry's maturation as a pop star, but dismissed the lyrical content as "bit too much
self-help book redemption".[58] Writing for The Daily Telegraph, Kate Solomon noted that Smile feels very "so earnest that it strays into cringe-worthy territory", but displays the strongest traits of Perry's music: "fizzy bops" and huge hooks.[3]
USA Today writer Patrick Ryan opined that Smile exudes newfound joy, with some of the most carefree songs of the singer's career. However, he criticized the self-empowerment lyrics as clichéd, adding that Perry gives listeners a
déjà vu rather than seeking a new musical direction.[5] Leah Greenblatt of Entertainment Weekly described the album's sound as too familiar, unaltered from Perry's older discography.[50] Craig Jenkins of Vulture found Smile to be lyrically weak, but overall an improvement over Witness, and named the singles as its best tracks.[59] Alexa Camp from Slant Magazine wrote that Perry avoids experimentation by opting to stay "in her lane".[60] Kish Lal of The Sydney Morning Herald branded Smile as falling flat despite the honesty in subjects dealt.[55] Louise Bruton of The Irish Times asserted that the album possesses perfect melodies, but criticized the lyrics as "subpar".[52]
In unfavorable reviews, Pitchfork writer Dani Blum dubbed Smile as cliché-ridden pop with confusing platitudes, that is also inapt for the
COVID-19 pandemic.[54]The A.V. Club's Alex McLevy opined that Perry is "struggling to be taken seriously", as Smile holds back her ability to evolve, instead of the intended showcase of the singer's "real" side.[48]Stereogum's Chris DeVille wrote the record was dull and unadventurous, and did not believe the lyricism was memorable,[61] while Helen Brown of The Independent called the album forgettable, and found the singer resorting to basics.[51] Hannah Mylrea of NME wrote that the album comprises lackluster imitations and fillers, devoid of the catchy hooks and
couplets of Perry's older records.[53] Writing for Clash, Joe Rivers felt Smile lacked substance, and called the production outdated.[49]
Commercial performance
Journalists have described Smile as a commercial decline for Perry.[62][63]Smile debuted at number five on the US
Billboard 200 chart, marking Perry's fifth top-10 album and her first album since One of the Boys (2008) to not reach number one. It opened with 50,000
album equivalent units, of which 35,000 were sales, 14,000 were streaming-equivalent units (translating to 21 million on-demand streams) and 2,000 track-equivalent units.[64]Smile fell 49 spots to number 54 in its second week,[65] and placed at number 104 in the third week.[66][67][68] As of March 2021, Smile has sold 67,000 pure copies and accumulated 402,000 units in the United States.[69] In July 2024, the album was certified Gold by the
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for selling 500,000 album-equivalent units.
LP pressings of the album include an alternative version of "Smile" featuring
Diddy, with additional writers
Sean Combs and
Cordae Dunston, instead of the solo version.[81]
"Never Really Over" contains interpolations from "Love You Like That", written by
Dagny Sandvik, Jason Gill, Michelle Buzz.
^Torres, Leonardo (July 8, 2020).
"Título do álbum novo da Katy Perry é confirmado" [Title for Katy Perry's new album is confirmed] (in Brazilian Portuguese). POPline.
Archived from the original on September 3, 2020. Retrieved July 19, 2020.
^"Archived copy". www.youtube.com.
Archived from the original on April 25, 2021. Retrieved April 25, 2021.{{
cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (
link)