2019 studio album by The Chainsmokers
World War Joy Released December 6, 2019 (December 6, 2019 ) Recorded 2019 Genre Length 33 :47 Label Producer "Who Do You Love " Released: February 7, 2019 "Kills You Slowly" Released: March 29, 2019 "Do You Mean" Released: April 26, 2019 "Call You Mine " Released: May 31, 2019 "Takeaway " Released: July 24, 2019 "Push My Luck " Released: November 8, 2019 "The Reaper " Released: December 6, 2019[1] "Family " Released: December 6, 2019 "See the Way" Released: December 6, 2019 "P.S. I Hope You're Happy " Released: December 6, 2019
World War Joy is the third studio album by American DJ and production duo The Chainsmokers . It was released on December 6, 2019, under Disruptor and Columbia Records .[2] The album features collaborations with Amy Shark , Kygo , Sabrina Claudio , Blink-182 , Illenium , Lennon Stella , Bebe Rexha , Ty Dolla $ign , Bülow and 5 Seconds of Summer . World War Joy , which consists of 6 singles gradually released throughout the year (in a vein similar to their previous album, Sick Boy ) and 4 new singles, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums Chart.[3]
Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating AllMusic [4]
Background [ edit ] Similarly to how their previous album, Sick Boy , was released,[5] The Chainsmokers gradually released World War Joy with new singles monthly, collecting them together as EPs each time.
On February 7, 2019, The Chainsmokers released the album's lead single "Who Do You Love ", featuring Australian band 5 Seconds of Summer . In an interview with Billboard on March 27, 2019, they announced plans to release a new album, World War Joy , in 2019.[7] The second single from the album, titled "Kills You Slowly", was released on March 29, 2019.[8] The third single from the album, "Do You Mean", featuring Ty Dolla $ign and Bülow , was released on April 26, 2019.[9] The fourth single from the album, "Call You Mine ", featuring Bebe Rexha , was released on May 31, 2019.[10] On July 17, the Chainsmokers revealed the title "Takeaway ", the next single, a collaboration with Illenium featuring Lennon Stella , which was released on July 24, 2019, as the fifth single of both World War Joy and Illenium's third album, Ascend .[11] On September 25, while performing in Cincinnati , the duo premiered a new unreleased song from the album called "Push My Luck ", which was released later on November 8, 2019. On December 6, 2019, "Family ", "P.S. I Hope You're Happy ", "See the Way", and "The Reaper " were released as the seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth singles from the album.
Commercial performance [ edit ] The album debuted and peaked at number 65 on the Billboard 200 , however it debuted atop Billboard's Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart with 14,000 equivalent album units, including 2,000 from traditional album sales, according to Nielsen Music.[13]
Track listing [ edit ] Adapted from Tidal .[14]
Japan edition bonus tracks[15] Title 11. "Closer " (featuring Mackenyu Arata ) 4:06 12. "Takeaway" (with Illenium featuring Lennon Stella) (Sondr Remix) 3:34 13. "Push My Luck" (Twinsick Remix) 3:22 14. "Call You Mine" (featuring Bebe Rexha) (Keanu Silver Remix) 2:49 15. "Who Do You Love" (featuring 5 Seconds of Summer) (R3hab Remix) 2:32 Total length: 53:29
World War Joy EP[16] [17] Title Writer(s) Producer(s) 1. "Call You Mine" (featuring Bebe Rexha) Andrew Taggart Alex Pall Tony Ann Andrew Wotman Alexandra Tamposi Steve McCutcheon Norman Whitfield 3:37 2. "Do You Mean" (featuring Ty Dolla $ign and Bülow) Taggart Pall William Spencer Bastian Tyrone Griffin Megan Bülow Shae Jacobs Michael Wise Kennedi Lykken The Chainsmokers William Spencer Bastian (voc.) 3:13 3. "Kills You Slowly" Taggart Pall Parrish Warrington Diedrik van Elsas Gino The Ghost Kristyn Watkins Liam O'Donnell Maxwell George "MAX" Schneider Nathaniel Motte The Chainsmokers Trackside London On Da Track (add.) 3:35 4. "Who Do You Love" (featuring 5 Seconds of Summer) 3:46 Total length: 14:11
Notes
^[c] signifies a co-producer ^[a] signifies an additional producer ^[v] signifies a vocal producer Personnel [ edit ] Adapted from Tidal.[16]
Adam Alpert – executive production Alex Pall – production (all) , songwriting (all) Andrew Jackson – songwriting, background vocals (2) Andrew Taggart – production (all) , songwriting (all) , vocals (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 8, 9) , backing vocals (7, 10) Talay Riley – songwriting (track 10) , background vocals (track 10) Luke Hemmings – vocals (track 10) , songwriting (track 10) Ashton Irwin – vocals (track 10) , songwriting (track 10) Calum Hood – vocals (track 10) , songwriting (track 10) Michael Clifford – vocals (track 10) , songwriting (track 10) Andrew Watt – production (track 7) Bebe Rexha — vocals (track 7) Weekly charts [ edit ] Year-end charts [ edit ]
Certifications [ edit ] In support of the album, the duo embarked on the World War Joy Tour in fall 2019 alongside Australian band, 5 Seconds of Summer and Canadian musician Lennon Stella .[41] This tour was different from their previous shows since they are playing a fully live show, and not a hybrid DJ set/live show like the Memories...Do Not Open Tour and some of their festival performances. Matt McGuire returned as drummer as well as serving as music director. The tour took place across various arenas in 41 North American cities.[42]
Date City Country Venue September 25, 2019 Cincinnati United States U.S. Bank Arena September 27, 2019 Boston TD Garden September 28, 2019 Uncasville Mohegan Sun Arena September 29, 2019 University Park Bryce Jordan Center October 3, 2019 Detroit Little Caesars Arena October 4, 2019 Chicago United Center October 5, 2019 Saint Paul Xcel Energy Center October 8, 2019 Toronto Canada Scotiabank Arena October 9, 2019 Montreal Bell Centre October 11, 2019 Pittsburgh United States PPG Paints Arena October 12, 2019 Buffalo KeyBank Center October 13, 2019 Columbus Schottenstein Center October 15, 2019 Washington, D.C. Capital One Arena October 17, 2019 Brooklyn Barclays Center October 20, 2019 Nashville Bridgestone Arena October 22, 2019 Atlanta State Farm Arena October 24, 2019 Miami AmericanAirlines Arena October 25, 2019 Tampa Amalie Arena October 26, 2019 Orlando Amway Center October 29, 2019 New Orleans Smoothie King Center October 31, 2019 Dallas American Airlines Center November 1, 2019 Austin Frank Erwin Center November 2, 2019 Houston Toyota Center November 6, 2019 Louisville KFC Yum! Center November 7, 2019 Indianapolis Bankers Life Fieldhouse November 8, 2019 St. Louis Enterprise Center November 9, 2019 Madison Coliseum at Alliant Energy Center November 12, 2019 Milwaukee Fiserv Forum November 14, 2019 Oklahoma City Chesapeake Energy Arena November 15, 2019 Kansas City Sprint Center November 16, 2019 Wichita Intrust Bank Arena November 19, 2019 Denver Pepsi Center November 21, 2019 Salt Lake City Vivint Smart Home Arena November 23, 2019 Phoenix Talking Stick Resort Arena November 24, 2019 San Diego Viejas Arena November 26, 2019 Inglewood The Forum November 29, 2019 San Francisco Chase Center December 1, 2019 Sacramento Golden 1 Center December 3, 2019 Tacoma Tacoma Dome December 5, 2019 Portland Moda Center December 6, 2019 Vancouver Canada Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena
References [ edit ] ^ "Singles to Radio 6 December 2019" . December 6, 2019. Retrieved December 20, 2019 . ^ Tyron, Oliver (November 28, 2019). "The Chainsmokers Set to Release 'World War Joy' Album Next Week" . CULTR . Retrieved November 29, 2019 . ^ Murray, Gordon (2019-06-13). "The Chainsmokers' 'World War Joy' Debuts at No. 1 On Top Dance/Electronic Albums Chart" . Billboard . Retrieved 2022-04-02 . ^ "World War Joy Review by Neil Z. Yeung" . allmusic.com . December 6, 2019. Retrieved December 6, 2019 . ^ Knopper, Steve (2018-03-23). "Inside The Chainsmokers' Plan to Rethink the Album Cycle" . Billboard . Retrieved 2023-02-27 . ^ Bein, Kat (March 27, 2019). "The Chainsmokers Tease New Song, 'World War Joy' Album for 2019" . Billboard . Retrieved December 2, 2019 . ^ Bein, Kat (March 27, 2019). "The Chainsmokers Debut Smoldering New Track 'Kills You Slowly': Listen" . Billboard . Retrieved April 28, 2019 . ^ Bein, Kat (April 26, 2019). "The Chainsmokers, Ty Dolla Sign & Bulow Brood on the Beat in 'Do You Mean': Watch" . Billboard . Retrieved April 28, 2019 . ^ Bein, Kat (May 31, 2019). "Bebe Rexha Poisons The Chainsmokers In 'Call You Mine' Video: Watch" . Billboard . Retrieved June 1, 2019 . ^ @TheChainsmokers (July 17, 2019). "+1 (212) 969-8427" (Tweet ). Retrieved July 18, 2019 – via Twitter . ^ Murray, Gordon (December 19, 2019). " 'Joy' to the World: The Chainsmokers Debut at No. 1 on Top Dance/Electronic Albums Chart" . Billboard. Retrieved December 20, 2019 . ^ "World War Joy" . Retrieved December 5, 2019 . ^ "World War Joy (Japan Edition) by The Chainsmokers on Apple Music" . Apple. ^ a b "World War Joy / The Chainsmokers" (Click on the three dots next to the release details and click "Credits" to access the credits.) . Tidal . Retrieved July 19, 2019 . ^ "World War Joy - EP by The Chainsmokers on Apple Music" . iTunes . May 31, 2019. Retrieved July 19, 2019 . ^ "ARIA Australian Top 50 Albums" . Australian Recording Industry Association . January 13, 2020. Retrieved January 11, 2020 . ^ "The Chainsmokers Chart History (Canadian Albums)" . Billboard . Retrieved December 17, 2019. ^ "Czech Albums – Top 100" . ČNS IFPI . Note : On the chart page, select 02.Týden 2020 on the field besides the words "CZ – ALBUMS – TOP 100 " to retrieve the correct chart. Retrieved January 14, 2020. ^ "Dutchcharts.nl – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" (in Dutch). Hung Medien. Retrieved January 3, 2020. ^ "The Chainsmokers: World War Joy" (in Finnish). Musiikkituottajat – IFPI Finland . Retrieved January 12, 2020. ^ "Irish Albums Chart: 10 January 2020" . Irish Recorded Music Association. Retrieved January 11, 2020 . ^ "World War Joy on Billboard Japan Hot Albums" . Billboard Japan (in Japanese). Retrieved September 11, 2020 . ^ "Oricon Top 50 Albums: 2020-03-02" (in Japanese). Oricon . Retrieved February 26, 2020. ^ "Mūzikas Patēriņa Tops/ 50. nedēļa" (in Latvian). LAIPA . December 13, 2019. Retrieved December 14, 2019 . ^ "NZ Top 40 Albums Chart" . Recorded Music NZ . January 13, 2020. Retrieved January 11, 2020 . ^ "Veckolista Album, vecka 2" . Sverigetopplistan . Retrieved January 11, 2020 . ^ "The Chainsmokers Chart History (Billboard 200)" . Billboard . Retrieved December 17, 2019. ^ "The Chainsmokers Chart History (Top Dance/Electronic Albums)" . Billboard . Retrieved December 17, 2019. ^ "ARIA Top 100 Albums for 2020" . Australian Recording Industry Association. Retrieved January 15, 2021 . ^ "Jaaroverzichten – Album 2020" (in Dutch). MegaCharts. Retrieved January 6, 2021 . ^ "Årslista Album, 2020" . Sverigetopplistan. Retrieved January 20, 2021 . ^ "Top Dance/Electronic Albums – Year-End 2020" . Billboard . Retrieved December 7, 2020 . ^ "ARIA Charts – Accreditations – 2020 Albums" (PDF) . Australian Recording Industry Association . Retrieved January 1, 2021 . ^ "Brazilian album certifications – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" (in Portuguese). Pro-Música Brasil . Retrieved October 21, 2023 . ^ "Canadian album certifications – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" . Music Canada . Retrieved December 20, 2019 . ^ "Danish album certifications – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" . IFPI Danmark . Retrieved January 17, 2024 . ^ "Singapore album certifications – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" . Recording Industry Association Singapore . Retrieved December 24, 2020 . ^ "American album certifications – The Chainsmokers – World War Joy" . Recording Industry Association of America . Retrieved November 24, 2020 . ^ Acevedo, Angelica (2019-02-12). "5SOS & The Chainsmokers Announce North American Tour With 5 Seconds Of Summer, Lennon Stella: See Dates" . Billboard . Retrieved 2020-07-11 . ^ Aneed, Samantha (2019-02-12). "5 Seconds of Summer and The Chainsmokers Announce North American Tour" . Beyond The Stage Magazine . Retrieved 2020-07-11 .
Studio albums Extended plays Singles Promotional singles Tours