Artist: Fifth Harmony
Album: Reflection (Deluxe)
Genre: Pop
Release Date: 2015
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 48:45
Total Tracks: 14
Total Size: 598 MB
Tracklist:
01. Fifth Harmony – Top Down (03:40)
02. Fifth Harmony – BO$$ (02:51)
03. Fifth Harmony – Sledgehammer (03:50)
04. Fifth Harmony – Worth It (03:44)
05. Fifth Harmony – This is How We Roll (04:32)
06. Fifth Harmony – Everlasting Love (03:04)
07. Fifth Harmony – Like Mariah (03:28)
08. Fifth Harmony – Them Girls Be Like (02:42)
09. Fifth Harmony – Reflection (03:08)
10. Fifth Harmony – Suga Mama (03:39)
11. Fifth Harmony – We Know (02:57)
12. Fifth Harmony – Going Nowhere (03:34)
13. Fifth Harmony – Body Rock (04:03)
14. Fifth Harmony – Brave Honest Beautiful (03:28)
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“Reflection” is the debut studio album by American girl group Fifth Harmony. Lyrically, the album discusses themes of female-empowerment, romance, heartbreak and confidence, and this pop album showcases synthpop, “grungy” hip hop and R&B sounds. The album features guest appearances by American rappers Kid Ink and Tyga, as well as American singer-songwriter Meghan Trainor, and collaborations with several producers including Ori Kaplan, Dr. Luke and Stargate. The album received acclaim from contemporary music critics, and was ranked as one of the best albums of 2015 by several publications, including Spin, Rolling Stone and Complex.The debut album from The X-Factor’s second season third-place finishers Fifth Harmony, 2015’s Reflection is a slick production superbly showcasing the group’s multi-voiced approach to contemporary R&B. Working with a bevy of top-notch producers and songwriters including Julian Bunetta, Stargate, Dr. Luke, Ricky Reed, and others, Fifth Harmony members Ally Brooke Hernandez, Camila Cabello, Normani Hamilton, Dinah-Jane Hansen, and Lauren Jauregui have crafted an album that is very much a savvy pop product of the moment. Reflection hits upon all the au currant musical touchstones, from electronic-infused dance music to synthy, rhythmically bumptious hip-hop, to retro-’90s R&B, all without ever going too far in any one direction. If there is any one major antecedent to Reflection, it is clearly Beyonce’s 2013 feminism-steeped eponymous opus. Along with various production similarities, from the militaristic drum corps rhythmic bed of “Bo$$” to the general focus on resonant vocals, there is also an overall vibe of positive girl power permeating Reflection. Fifth Harmony even directly reference one of Beyonce’s most quotable lyrics, singing “Do you ever post your pics with no filter, ‘Hashtag,’ I woke up like this, too” on “Them Girls Be Like.” Although essentially a radio-ready pop aperitif and nowhere near the cultural touchstone of Beyonce’s album, Reflection nonetheless works as a Revlon ad-level post-feminist girls’ night out with plenty of vintage ’90s R&B swagger, all of which works to remind you that these women have all the right influences, from Beyonce to Mariah Carey, on the aptly titled “Like Mariah,” even going so far as to call out the First Lady on the aforementioned anthemic “Bo$$.” While lyrics like “Boss…Michelle Obama, purse so heavy gettin’ Oprah Dollars” don’t rise to the level of social commentary, they do seem to be offered with a glint of tongue-in-cheek humor, making Reflection an undeniably fun listen from beginning to end.