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  1. Channel Orange is the debut studio album by American R&B singer-songwriter Frank Ocean. It was released on July 10, 2012, by Def Jam Recordings . After releasing his mixtape Nostalgia, Ultra the previous year, Ocean began writing new songs with Malay , a producer and songwriter who then assisted him with recording Channel Orange at EastWest Studios in Hollywood.

  2. Jul 10, 2012 · The CD version of channel ORANGE, released on July 17, 2012, included the hidden bonus track “Golden Girl,” featuring Tyler, The Creator, after the album’s final listed track “End.”. On ...

  3. Jul 12, 2012 · On Channel Orange, this serene deadpan is splashed with crackling emotion, as though he's alternately narrating and starring in his own Magnolia-style cross-wired-heartbreak epic.

  4. Jul 10, 2022 · July 10, 2022. Ocean in 2012 Jason Kempin/Getty Images. Released ten years ago today, Frank Ocean ’s debut, Channel Orange, stands as a singular achievement in popular culture and a touchstone ...

  5. Listen to channel ORANGE on Spotify. Frank Ocean · Album · 2012 · 17 songs.

  6. By the summer of 2012, all had been revealed: through the popularity of Nostalgia, Ultra, Ocean had forced his songwriting deal with Def Jam into a solo career, and channel ORANGE was full of laconic, literary tracks about the underbelly of Southern California life with a Didion-esque intensity and detail.

  7. Oct 29, 2018 · Provided to YouTube by Universal Music GroupThinkin Bout You · Frank Oceanchannel ORANGE℗ 2012 The Island Def Jam Music GroupReleased on: 2012-01-01Producer:...

  8. www.rollingstone.com › music › music-album-reviewsChannel Orange - Rolling Stone

    Jul 13, 2012 · Channel Orange. By Jody Rosen. July 13, 2012. The question isn’t who Frank Ocean loves. It’s how he loves: ardently, recklessly, yet knowingly, with a young man’s headlong passion and a ...

  9. Listen to channel ORANGE (Explicit Version) on Spotify. Frank Ocean · Album · 2012 · 17 songs.

  10. Channel ORANGE breezes from sepia-toned Stevie Wonder homage (“Sweet Life”) to the corrosive cosmic funk of “Pyramids”, which stretches from ancient pharaoh queens to 21st-century pimps. Rendered in pristine detail with calm, dazzled awe, even his most fantastical narratives feel somehow familiar—at once unprecedented and timeless.