Sky Ferreira discography | |
---|---|
Studio albums | 1 |
EPs | 3 |
Singles | 10 |
Music videos | 15 |
Promotional singles | 3 |
American singer and songwriter Sky Ferreira has released one studio album, three extended plays, 10 singles (including one as a featured artist), three promotional singles (including one as a featured artist), and 15 music videos. She signed a recording contract with Parlophone in 2009[1] and released the song "One" through the label in 2010.[2] It was written by Ferreira, Bloodshy & Avant, Magnus Lidehäll, Marit Bergman[3] and peaked at number 64 on the UK Singles Chart.[2] It was followed by "Obsession" later that year which was written by Ferreira, Jerrod Bettis, Justin Franks and Ryan Tedder.[4] It reached number 37 on the US Billboard Hot Dance Club Songs chart.[5] During this time, much of her lyrical content incorporated themes of rebellion and teenage romance.[6]
Ferreira released her first extended play, As If! in 2011 for which she co-wrote "Sex Rules" and "99 Tears" with Greg Kurstin, "Haters Anonymous" and "108" with Bloodshy & Avant.[7] Her second extended play, Ghost was released in 2012 by Capitol Records;[8] It substituted the synth-pop styles displayed in her earlier projects[9] and instead showcased more prominent elements of acoustic, new wave, and rock music.[10] Its second single, "Everything Is Embarrassing", was written by Ferreira, Dev Hynes and Ariel Rechtshaid[11] and had sold 19,000 copies in the United States as of March 2014.[12]
Ferreira released her debut studio album, Night Time, My Time in October 2013;[13] It was largely inspired in indie rock musical styles.[14] The record debuted at number 45 on the US Billboard 200, becoming her first entry on the chart.[15] Ariel Rechtshaid and Justin Louis "J.L." Raisen helped co-write each of its 12 tracks.[16] Her third extended play, Night Time, My Time: B-Sides Part 1 was released roughly one month later[17] and featured additional writing contributions from Rechitshaid.[18] That year, she additionally appeared as a featured vocalist on the track "Black" by South Korean recording artist G-Dragon for his second studio album, Coup d'Etat; he co-wrote the song with Teddy Park.[19]
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