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Welcome Reality

Welcome Reality
WelcomeReality.jpg
Studio album by Nero
Released 12 August 2011 (2011-08-12)
Recorded 6 October 2008 – 1 April 2011
Genre Electronic, Dubstep, Indie Dance, Electro House, Drum & Bass
Length 61:10
Label
Producer Nero
Nero chronology
Welcome Reality
(2011)
Between II Worlds
(2015)Between II Worlds2015
Alternative cover
2012 re-issue (Welcome Reality +)
2012 re-issue (Welcome Reality +)
Singles from Welcome Reality
  1. "Innocence"
    Released: 26 April 2010
  2. "Me & You"
    Released: 2 January 2011
  3. "Guilt"
    Released: 24 April 2011
  4. "Promises"
    Released: 5 August 2011
  5. "Crush on You"
    Released: 13 October 2011
  6. "Reaching Out"
    Released: 16 December 2011
  7. "Must Be the Feeling"
    Released: 5 March 2012
  8. "Won't You (Be There)"
    Released: 19 October 2012
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 3/5 stars
BBC (Unfavorable)
Clash (4/10)
The Guardian 3/5 stars
The Independent (Favorable)
LA Times (Favorable)
MusicOMH 3/5 stars
NY Times (Favorable)
Pop Matters (7/10)
Spin (7/10)

Welcome Reality is the debut album by British group Nero. A concept album, it was released first in Ireland on 12 August 2011 and the rest of the world on 15 August 2011 except Australia and New Zealand where it was released on 19 August 2011 on Chase & Status's MTA Records. The album has sold 120,000 copies in the United States as of July 2015.

Welcome Reality has received generally positive reviews. Spin gave the album a score of 7/10, and wrote, "Alana Watson gives Nero's robotic skronk a rare injection of humanity, and the U.K. producers are smart enough to build most of their debut full-length around her husky voice, skipping the sampled spasticity of Skrillex in favor of Daft Punk's melodic big beat, '80s-inspired electro, and stadium-sized mash-ups of squealing guitar and windy synths." Jeff Weiss, for the LA Times, found the album to be "As effective as it is predictable", stating "Welcome Reality will inevitably soundtrack thousands of summer and fall blowouts". The album was not well received by Clash, who stated that "Welcome Reality is so in your face and predictable it feels like the musical equivalent of a Michael Bay movie: loud, crass, periodically fun, but ultimately forgettable".


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