Club Future Nostalgia
Club Future Nostalgia is a remix album by English singer Dua Lipa and American DJ the Blessed Madonna, comprising remixes of songs from Lipa's second studio album, Future Nostalgia (2020).[1] The project was released in two editions: a DJ mix version on August 28, 2020, and a standard unmixed remix edition on September 11, 2020, both via Warner Records.[2][3] The album features 17 tracks reimagined by 15 producers, including Joe Goddard, Jayda G, Moodymann, and Kaytranada, blending styles such as house, nu-disco, and dance-pop.[1][4] Guest appearances include Madonna and Missy Elliott on "Levitating", and Gwen Stefani on "Physical".[1] The DJ mix edition runs for approximately 50 minutes, emphasizing club-ready transitions, while the unmixed version allows individual remixes to stand alone.[1][5] Critically, Club Future Nostalgia received generally positive reviews for its energetic reinterpretations and diverse production, though some critics noted its occasionally uneven pacing due to the rapid succession of styles.[1] Pitchfork awarded it a 6.9 out of 10, praising standout remixes like Yaeji's take on "Don't Start Now" but critiquing the "overstuffed" feel.[1] Commercially, the album debuted at number one on the Billboard Dance/Electronic Albums chart and number 28 on the Billboard 200 in the United States, with first-week equivalent album units of 18,000.[6] It also achieved top-ten positions on dance charts in several countries, extending the success of the original Future Nostalgia during the COVID-19 pandemic's impact on live music.[6]Background and Development
Background
The collaboration between Dua Lipa and DJ The Blessed Madonna originated at the Glastonbury Festival in 2019, where they first met during a DJ takeover set organized by mutual collaborator Mark Ronson, fostering an immediate creative connection that would later shape the project.[7] This encounter built on prior work, including The Blessed Madonna's remix of Lipa's "Electricity" with Silk City in 2018, which highlighted their shared affinity for dance and electronic sounds.[7] The album's conception emerged in early 2020 amid the COVID-19 lockdown, as global restrictions closed clubs and halted live music events, leaving audiences without spaces to experience dance music.[8] Lipa, whose Future Nostalgia had just released in March 2020, saw her planned tour canceled due to the pandemic, prompting her to reimagine the album as a club-oriented extension to bring the energy of nightlife into homes.[7] The Blessed Madonna served as executive producer, channeling the project's focus on virtual escapism during isolation.[8] Lipa described the initiative as a response to the era's challenges, stating, "Being grounded during the pandemic led me to start thinking out of the box," emphasizing its role in providing "club music from home" for clubless listeners.[7] This approach not only extended the thematic disco revival of Future Nostalgia but also adapted to the lockdown's constraints, turning limitation into a platform for communal virtual dancing.[8]Development
The concept for Club Future Nostalgia originated in 2019 when Dua Lipa's team proposed reimagining her upcoming album Future Nostalgia as a mixtape featuring samples, new versions, and collaborations, drawing inspiration from classic megamix formats, specifically Madonna's 1987 remix album You Can Dance.[9] This initial planning laid the groundwork for a project that would extend the original album's dance-pop aesthetic into club territory, though full execution was delayed by the COVID-19 lockdown.[8] The Blessed Madonna (Marea Stamper) joined as executive producer in May 2020 following a Zoom call between her team and Lipa's, bringing her expertise in soulful dance music to oversee the curation and ensure a cohesive narrative arc.[9] She decided to structure the album dually: as a continuous DJ mix for immersive listening and as a collection of individual remixes to highlight diverse contributions from producers and guest artists.[9] Discussions emphasized balancing fidelity to the original Future Nostalgia tracks—preserving Lipa's vocal essence and the "Dua-verse" integrity—with club-oriented enhancements like deeper beats and underground influences, avoiding disruptions to the source material's pop structure.[9][10] The project finalized in summer 2020 amid quarantine constraints, with the DJ mix edition released first on August 28 to generate buzz and simulate a club experience for fans unable to attend live events.[8][11] This strategy built anticipation for the full standard edition, which followed on September 11, 2020, presenting the unmixed remixes in their extended forms.[9]Production
Production Process
The production of Club Future Nostalgia centered on reimagining Dua Lipa's Future Nostalgia through a remix lens that fused 1980s soul influences, 1990s house rhythms, and contemporary electronic elements to create a cohesive DJ mixtape experience. Executive producer The Blessed Madonna curated contributions from over a dozen remixers, emphasizing creative freedom while ensuring a unified narrative arc that highlighted Lipa's vocal presence and dance-pop lineage.[8][7] For instance, the "Good in Bed" remix by Zach Witness and Gen Hoshino incorporated a scratched sample from Neneh Cherry's 1988 track "Buffalo Stance," blending soulful hip-hop undertones with modern beats to evoke nostalgic club energy.[9] Due to COVID-19 lockdown restrictions in 2020, the entire project unfolded remotely over two months, with Lipa and The Blessed Madonna coordinating via digital file sharing on encrypted servers to exchange stems, remixes, and feedback. This setup allowed for rapid iteration without in-person sessions, enabling producers like Mark Ronson and Jayda G—freed from canceled tours—to contribute diverse takes on tracks such as "Physical" and "Cool." The process relied on standard digital audio workstations for editing and looping key elements, like Lipa's signature laugh, to amplify emotional and rhythmic details across the album.[7][8] Mixing prioritized seamless DJ flow in the primary edition, with transitions engineered to mimic a live club set rather than standalone tracks, creating a continuous 50-minute journey that hopscotched between piano house, Baltimore club, and hi-NRG styles. In contrast, the unmixed version released later preserved individual remixes for broader playback flexibility. Production anecdotes underscore the post-recording layering of guest vocals; for example, Madonna recorded her parts remotely through engineer Mike Dean for the "Levitating" remix, where she replaced original ad-libs, while Missy Elliott added a new verse to inject hip-hop flair. Similarly, Gwen Stefani contributed vocals to "Physical" after discussions to clear a sample from her 2004 hit "Hollaback Girl" for the "Hallucinate" remix, with her involvement on the Mark Ronson rework arising separately; the track features a smooth 90 bpm groove. These additions were integrated during final edits to enhance the album's collaborative depth without disrupting its dancefloor momentum.[9][7][8][12]Collaborators
The remix album Club Future Nostalgia features prominent guest artists who contributed vocals and creative input to select tracks, expanding the original Future Nostalgia sound into diverse club-oriented directions. Madonna provided distinctive vocals on the remix of "Levitating" by The Blessed Madonna, infusing the track with her signature sultry delivery and drawing on her legacy in dance-pop to elevate its anthemic quality.[13] Missy Elliott delivered a sharp rap verse on the same "Levitating" remix, introducing hip-hop flair and rhythmic complexity that contrasted with the original's disco elements; her addition was specifically aimed at bolstering the track's urban appeal and was recorded remotely amid pandemic restrictions.[7] Gwen Stefani contributed vibrant vocals to the Mark Ronson remix of "Physical," layering in her No Doubt-era pop-punk energy to create a playful, high-energy fusion that highlighted themes of empowerment. Like the other features, Stefani's involvement was arranged via digital file exchanges during lockdown, allowing seamless integration without in-person sessions.[14] Additional producers played crucial roles in shaping individual remixes, bringing specialized electronic and house influences. Joe Goddard of Hot Chip handled the remix of "Future Nostalgia," incorporating glitchy synths and pulsating beats drawn from his indie-dance background to amplify the track's futuristic vibe. Jayda G, known for her soulful deep house productions, remixed "Cool," adding warm, atmospheric textures and subtle vocal manipulations that emphasized emotional depth in the club context. These remote collaborations, coordinated through email and Zoom, exemplified the project's adaptive approach to global production challenges.[7] The inclusion of international talents further enhanced the album's worldwide resonance, bridging cultural dance traditions. For instance, Korean-American artist Yaeji remixed "Don't Start Now," blending her experimental electronic style with vaporwave-inspired vocals to infuse a contemporary Asian club aesthetic. Similarly, Japanese singer Gen Hoshino contributed to the remix of "Good in Bed" by Zach Witness, merging J-pop melodies with deep house grooves for broader cross-cultural accessibility. Such diverse inputs not only diversified the sonic palette but also positioned Club Future Nostalgia as a globally minded club experience, reflecting the borderless nature of electronic music in the digital era.[15]Composition
Musical Style
Club Future Nostalgia is characterized by a fusion of house, pop, and soul genres, drawing on influences from disco, Baltimore club, and piano house to create an eclectic dance-oriented sound.[16] This remix album evolves the nu-disco and synth-pop foundations of Dua Lipa's original Future Nostalgia into a more club-centric experience, featuring extended mixes tailored for DJ sets and seamless transitions that evoke a continuous mixtape flow.[17][1] The project blends 1990s house rhythms with contemporary 2020s pop structures and 1980s soul inflections, resulting in euphoric, high-energy tracks that prioritize dancefloor immersion over the original's radio-friendly polish.[17][7] The album's tempos generally range from 94 to 128 BPM, aligning with house music's standard pulse to facilitate extended play in club environments, though some remixes downshift for atmospheric effect, such as the 90 BPM rendition of "Physical."[18][7] Instrumentation emphasizes pulsating synths, rubbery basslines, and vocal chops, often layered with percussive elements like cowbells, piano riffs, and ambient samples to build tension and release typical of warehouse raves and underground sets.[1][7][17] Subtle nods to balearic beats appear in the relaxed, groove-heavy arrangements that incorporate hi-NRG and disco flourishes, enhancing the record's summery, escapist vibe.[7] Despite its remote production process—conducted via encrypted servers and Zoom collaborations during the 2020 lockdown—the album sonically channels club culture through its relentless energy, sampled historical dance tracks, and inclusive guest features that mirror diverse nightlife scenes.[7][17] This approach transforms the isolation of the pandemic era into a virtual dance party, with funky bass grooves and euphoric builds paying homage to iconic house and soul traditions while pushing forward pop's club evolution.[1][17]Track Analysis
The remixes in Club Future Nostalgia reimagine the original Future Nostalgia tracks by infusing them with diverse electronic subgenres, often extending or condensing structures to emphasize club-oriented rhythms and atmospheres. For instance, early tracks like the title track receive euphoric synth additions in Joe Goddard's remix, evoking Hot Chip's playful electronic style, while "Don't Start Now" by Yaeji incorporates trap-inflected house elements with chopped vocals for a hypnotic, rave-like bounce. Mid-album clusters shift toward deeper grooves, as seen in "Hallucinate," where Mr. Fingers strips the song to minimal loops and altered vocal effects, transforming its disco-pop core into an ambient deep house meditation.[17][1] Later sections introduce loungey and funky reinterpretations; "Physical" in Mark Ronson's remix adopts a midtempo synth-pop vibe with added verses, softening the original's sharp edges into a more relaxed, nostalgic flow, whereas "Break My Heart" via Moodymann gains bass-heavy ambiance and subtle funk sampling for a winding, immersive close. These alterations prioritize dancefloor adaptability over the originals' concise pop hooks, blending piano house, Baltimore club, and gospel-infused edits to create varied textural layers without losing the album's disco foundation.[1][19] The DJ mix edition, curated by The Blessed Madonna, weaves these 17 remixes into a seamless 50-minute continuous set, contrasting sharply with the standalone versions by eliminating pauses and using fluid transitions to mimic an uninterrupted club session. This approach heightens the album's immersive quality, allowing disparate styles to bleed into one another for a dynamic, party-sustaining narrative rather than isolated listens.[1][19] Guest features, such as those from Madonna, Missy Elliott, and Gwen Stefani, are strategically placed in high-impact spots like "Levitating" and "Physical" to inject star power and vocal interplay, boosting the mix's replay value through memorable collaborative hooks without overshadowing Lipa's presence.[17] Energy levels vary progressively across the album, opening with upbeat, euphoric surges in tracks like the Goddard remix to energize listeners, before tapering into cooler, more introspective closers such as Moodymann's ambient rework, fostering a natural arc from peak-time frenzy to winding-down vibes.[17][1]Release and Promotion
Announcement and Release
On August 4, 2020, Dua Lipa announced Club Future Nostalgia, a remix album of her second studio album Future Nostalgia, curated and mixed by DJ the Blessed Madonna.[20] The project was initially slated for release on August 21, 2020, as a DJ mix edition featuring collaborations with artists including Madonna, Missy Elliott, Gwen Stefani, and Mark Ronson.[21] The lead single, "Levitating (The Blessed Madonna Remix)" featuring Madonna and Missy Elliott, was released digitally on August 13, 2020, ahead of the album.[22] However, on August 11, Lipa revealed a one-week delay for the DJ mix edition, pushing it to August 28, 2020, to allow additional time for completing bespoke animations for each track's visualizer.[21] The DJ mix was then released digitally on streaming platforms on that date, accompanied by a continuous visualizer compiling animated segments for all tracks.[21] The standard edition, featuring the individual remixes without continuous mixing, followed on September 11, 2020, also available initially through digital streaming services.[23]Promotion Strategies
The promotion of Club Future Nostalgia heavily relied on social media teasers that highlighted collaborations with prominent guest artists and incorporated club-themed visuals to evoke a sense of nightlife during the COVID-19 lockdowns. Dua Lipa announced the project on August 4, 2020, via Instagram, sharing a video teaser for the "Levitating" remix featuring Madonna and Missy Elliott, alongside appearances by Gwen Stefani and Mark Ronson, which included retro club aesthetics like neon lights and dance floor motifs to build anticipation.[14] Subsequent posts revealed additional guests such as Blackpink and Jamiroquai, using short clips of remixed tracks overlaid with vibrant, disco-inspired graphics to engage fans and emphasize the album's house music roots.[15] These teasers amassed millions of views, fostering viral buzz by teasing the remix album's all-star lineup without disclosing the full tracklist initially.[24] Partnerships with streaming platforms like Spotify played a key role in amplifying the album's reach through curated playlists and virtual experiences tailored to the pandemic era. The Blessed Madonna created an official Spotify playlist titled "CLUB FUTURE NOSTALGIA: THE PLAYLIST," which compiled influences and remixes from the project, helping listeners discover the album's extended universe of house and disco tracks.[25] Additionally, promotional efforts included virtual club events promoted via Spotify's Concerts hub, where fans could access live-streamed DJ sets and listening parties featuring Club Future Nostalgia tracks, simulating a club atmosphere at home.[26] These initiatives, launched around the album's release, integrated the project into Spotify's ecosystem, boosting streams by connecting it to broader virtual nightlife programming.[27] The album was promoted as a companion to Dua Lipa's postponed Future Nostalgia Tour, positioning it as an auditory extension of the live performances that could not occur in 2020 due to the pandemic. Marketing materials framed Club Future Nostalgia as a "virtual tour" substitute, with Lipa stating in interviews that the remixes captured the energy intended for the stage, encouraging fans to experience it as a prelude to the rescheduled shows.[8] This tie-in maintained momentum for the tour, which eventually incorporated medleys from the remix album when it commenced in 2022.[8] Merchandise and vinyl bundles were announced in late 2020 to capitalize on the album's success and appeal to collectors. On October 29, 2020, limited-edition bundles including a 2LP vinyl set with a cardboard sleeve and 33 RPM pressing, alongside a 2CD package, were made available for pre-order, featuring exclusive artwork tied to the club's nostalgic theme.[5] These items, released on November 27, 2020, were marketed through official channels as collector's editions, bundling the DJ mix with bonus remixes to enhance physical sales amid the digital-heavy promotion.[28] The visualizer for the album served as an additional promotional tool, released on YouTube to accompany streams and provide a dynamic viewing experience.[29]Visualizer
The visualizer for Club Future Nostalgia was released on 28 August 2020, coinciding with the DJ mix edition of the remix album.[29] Directed by James Papper, who handled animation, and Will Hooper, who oversaw live-action elements, the 50-minute video compiles bespoke visuals synchronized to the album's tracks.[30][31] It was conceived by Dua Lipa during preparations for the "Hallucinate" music video, leveraging lockdown restrictions to pivot toward animation as a creative solution.[8] The project emerged from a global collaboration involving 13 visual artists, who produced isolated performance clips remotely from their home cities, including Madrid, Seoul, Sydney, Berlin, Los Angeles, Vancouver, New York, Kentucky, Ghent, and London.[31] This approach mirrored the album's remix structure, with each artist designing unique segments tailored to individual tracks, such as surreal 3D designs and lo-fi illustrations.[32] Filming occurred under COVID-19 lockdown conditions, emphasizing self-shot footage that captured a sense of personal and collective isolation.[8] Artistically, the visualizer features abstract, colorful animations that sync precisely with the DJ mix's beats and transitions, evoking the vibrant yet distant atmosphere of a club experience amid pandemic solitude.[32] Mixed-media elements blend animation, illustration, and select live-action sequences—such as clips of Dua Lipa with Anwar Hadid—to create a nostalgic, immersive flow.[31] Post-production, handled by studios Blinkink and Blink, integrated these remote contributions into a cohesive film, with custom transitions enhancing the rhythmic continuity.[32] As a key promotional tool, it extended the album's reach on digital platforms like YouTube.[29]Critical Reception
Reviews
Club Future Nostalgia received positive reviews from music critics, earning an aggregate score of 81 out of 100 on Metacritic based on seven reviews, indicating universal acclaim.[33] Critics widely praised the album's danceability and its seamless transitions, which create an immersive club experience ideal for home listening. The Independent described it as "pure, undiluted fun," noting how "each track slides into the next to ensure the party never stops."[34] NME highlighted its "floor-filling house" elements and eclectic mix of modern pop, '80s soul, and funk-laced instrumentals, calling it an "exciting and eclectic" collection that reimagines the original tracks.[17] Guest features from artists like Madonna, Missy Elliott, Gwen Stefani, and Blackpink were often commended for adding diversity.[19] In comparisons to the original Future Nostalgia, reviewers noted the remix album's enhanced energy and less serious tone, with Variety calling it "the rare remix album that arguably improves on the original" by being "more free and fun."[19] However, some criticisms focused on how the remixes occasionally overshadow the originals' essence; Pitchfork remarked that it feels like "a round of exquisite corpse: fun while it lasts, but somehow less than the sum of its parts," lacking a cohesive DJ set arc.[1] The album's release during the COVID-19 pandemic was frequently highlighted as particularly relevant, providing a virtual escape to the dance floor. Variety positioned it as "a great soundtrack for your end-of-summer lockdown party," while another review praised it as a "gateway to a virtual dance floor" that honors the original's spirit amid restricted clubbing.[19][33]Year-End Lists and Accolades
At the end of 2020, Club Future Nostalgia received recognition from several music publications for its contributions to dance and pop music during a year marked by limited live performances due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The album's DJ mix edition, in particular, was praised for capturing the energy of club culture in a home-listening format. It appeared on multiple year-end best albums lists, highlighting its impact as a remix project. For instance, Jem Aswad of Variety ranked it #5 in his personal best albums of 2020, noting its reinvention of the original Future Nostalgia tracks through high-profile collaborations.[35][36] Similarly, Billboard staff placed it at #3 on their list of the 10 best dance albums of the year, commending its seamless transitions and star-studded remixes featuring artists like Madonna and Missy Elliott.[37] Other outlets included it in broader retrospectives without specific rankings. The Los Angeles Times featured it among "10 more not to be missed" albums beyond their top 10, appreciating its role in extending the dancefloor vibe of the original record.[38] Chris Molanphy of Slate combined it with Future Nostalgia as his #1 album of 2020, crediting the remix collection for enhancing the parent album's disco influences.[39] Despite this critical acclaim, Club Future Nostalgia did not receive major award nominations or wins in 2021, such as at the Grammy Awards, where recognition focused primarily on the original Future Nostalgia album.[40] Long-term retrospectives from 2021 to 2025 have occasionally referenced it in discussions of Dua Lipa's evolving discography, particularly around the 2022 Future Nostalgia Tour documentary and the 2025 fifth-anniversary reissues, but without new formal accolades.[2][41]Commercial Performance
Chart Performance
Club Future Nostalgia debuted at number 28 on the US Billboard 200 chart dated September 12, 2020.[6] It simultaneously entered at number one on the Billboard Top Dance/Electronic Albums chart, marking the first leader for both Dua Lipa and the Blessed Madonna on that ranking.[6] The album's chart entry was bolstered by strong streaming performance, reflecting its appeal as a remix collection amid heightened digital consumption during the period.[6] In Canada, Club Future Nostalgia reached a peak of number 13 on the Canadian Albums Chart in its debut week.[42] This position underscored the project's international traction within the dance and electronic genre, though it exited the chart after a single week.[42] The album also achieved top-ten positions on dance charts in several countries, extending the success of the original Future Nostalgia.[6] Prominent singles from the album also performed well on specialized charts. The Blessed Madonna's remix of "Levitating," featuring Madonna and Missy Elliott, debuted at number six on the Billboard Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart, contributing to the overall visibility of the project in electronic music circles.[6] This track further propelled streaming metrics, helping sustain momentum for the album's debut trajectories across dance-oriented platforms.[43]Sales and Certifications
In the United States, Club Future Nostalgia earned 18,000 album-equivalent units in its first week of release, with the majority derived from streaming equivalents rather than pure sales.[6] Total album-equivalent units tracked by the RIAA remain limited in public reporting for the remix album, as its performance has not been extensively detailed beyond the debut week, underscoring the project's targeted appeal to dance and electronic audiences.[44] As of November 2025, Club Future Nostalgia has not attained any major certifications from the RIAA or equivalent international organizations, distinguishing it from broader commercial releases in Dua Lipa's catalog.[44] By contrast, the original Future Nostalgia generated far greater sales volume, exceeding 11.5 million equivalent album units worldwide, largely due to its mainstream pop accessibility compared to the remix album's specialized club format.[45]Track Listings
DJ Mix Edition
The DJ Mix Edition of Club Future Nostalgia is a continuous DJ mix curated by American producer and DJ the Blessed Madonna in collaboration with Dua Lipa, released digitally on August 28, 2020.[46] It comprises 17 remixed segments drawn primarily from Lipa's 2020 album Future Nostalgia, supplemented by two previously unreleased tracks ("Love Is Religion" and "That Kind of Woman") and a remix of the 2018 collaboration "Kiss and Make Up" with Blackpink, resulting in a total runtime of 50 minutes and 7 seconds.[47] The mix emphasizes seamless transitions between segments to evoke a fluid, club-like experience adapted for home listening amid the COVID-19 pandemic restrictions, as the Blessed Madonna described it as prioritizing "more emotion, more melody, more feeling" over aggressive club sounds.[48] Various electronic producers and remixers contribute to individual segments, blending house, techno, and disco elements; for instance, Canadian artist Jayda G handles the remix of "Cool," infusing it with a deep house vibe.[4] The track listing for the DJ Mix Edition is as follows:[4]| No. | Title | Remixer(s) | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Future Nostalgia (Joe Goddard Remix) | Joe Goddard | 2:54 |
| 2 | Cool (Jayda G Remix) | Jayda G | 2:06 |
| 3 | Good in Bed (Zach Witness & Gen Hoshino Remixes) | Zach Witness, Gen Hoshino | 3:58 |
| 4 | Pretty Please (Midland Refix) | Midland | 1:28 |
| 5 | Pretty Please (Masters at Work Remix) | Masters at Work | 1:54 |
| 6 | Boys Will Be Boys (Zach Witness Remix) | Zach Witness | 3:29 |
| 7 | Love Again (Horse Meat Disco Remix) | Horse Meat Disco | 2:55 |
| 8 | Break My Heart / Cosmic Girl (Dimitri from Paris Edit) | Dimitri from Paris | 3:00 |
| 9 | Levitating (The Blessed Madonna Remix) (feat. Madonna & Missy Elliott) | The Blessed Madonna | 3:55 |
| 10 | Hallucinate (Mr. Fingers Deep Stripped Mix) | Mr. Fingers | 1:53 |
| 11 | Love Is Religion (The Blessed Madonna Remix) | The Blessed Madonna | 3:29 |
| 12 | Hallucinate (Paul Woolford Remix – Extended) | Paul Woolford | 1:49 |
| 13 | Don't Start Now (Yaeji Remix) | Yaeji | 2:53 |
| 14 | Physical (Mark Ronson Remix) (feat. Gwen Stefani) | Mark Ronson | 2:39 |
| 15 | Kiss and Make Up (Remix) (with Blackpink) | The Blessed Madonna | 2:21 |
| 16 | That Kind of Woman (Jacques Lu Cont Remix) | Jacques Lu Cont | 3:13 |
| 17 | Break My Heart (Moodymann Remix) | Moodymann | 6:11 |
Standard Edition
The Standard Edition of Club Future Nostalgia was released digitally on September 11, 2020, by Warner Records, presenting 17 standalone remixes of tracks from Dua Lipa's Future Nostalgia album, curated by The Blessed Madonna.[3] Unlike the DJ Mix edition, which features seamless transitions and a condensed runtime, this version omits crossfades to facilitate individual playback and custom DJ sets.[5] The total runtime is 77:46, emphasizing club-oriented edits suitable for dance floors.[5] Notable guest appearances include Madonna and Missy Elliott on "Levitating," as well as Gwen Stefani on "Physical."[5]| No. | Title | Remixer(s) | Featuring | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Levitating (The Blessed Madonna Remix)" | The Blessed Madonna | Madonna, Missy Elliott | 4:10 |
| 2 | "Cool (Jayda G Remix)" | Jayda G | 4:04 | |
| 3 | "Boys Will Be Boys (Zach Witness Remix)" | Zach Witness | 3:52 | |
| 4 | "Hallucinate (Mr. Fingers Deep Stripped Mix)" | Mr. Fingers | 8:04 | |
| 5 | "Physical (Mark Ronson Remix)" | Mark Ronson | Gwen Stefani | 3:04 |
| 6 | "Pretty Please (Masters at Work Remix)" | Masters at Work | 4:00 | |
| 7 | "Don't Start Now (Yaeji Remix)" | Yaeji | 4:15 | |
| 8 | "That Kind of Woman (Jacques Lu Cont Remix)" | Jacques Lu Cont | 4:49 | |
| 9 | "Good in Bed (Gen Hoshino Remix)" | Gen Hoshino | 3:32 | |
| 10 | "Love Is Religion (The Blessed Madonna Remix)" | The Blessed Madonna | 3:38 | |
| 11 | "Future Nostalgia (Joe Goddard Remix)" | Joe Goddard | 4:47 | |
| 12 | "Love Again (Horse Meat Disco Remix)" | Horse Meat Disco | 5:30 | |
| 13 | "Hallucinate (Paul Woolford Remix) [Extended]" | Paul Woolford | 5:14 | |
| 14 | "Don't Start Now (Kaytranada Remix)" | Kaytranada | 4:25 | |
| 15 | "Break My Heart (Moodymann Remix)" | Moodymann | 5:53 | |
| 16 | "Good in Bed (Zach Witness Remix)" | Zach Witness | 3:54 | |
| 17 | "Pretty Please (Midland Refix)" | Midland | 4:35 |
Samples
The remix album Club Future Nostalgia incorporates 11 distinct samples from classic dance, disco, and pop tracks, drawn from artists spanning the 1970s to the 1990s, to evoke a retro club atmosphere while updating Dua Lipa's original material for dancefloors. These samples, all legally cleared for use, are integrated into specific remixes to layer nostalgic elements like funky basslines, iconic vocals, and rhythmic hooks over the album's house and disco-infused productions, enhancing the project's theme of blending past and future sounds.[15] Key samples are featured across several tracks, as outlined in the official tracklist announcement:- In "Good in Bed (Zach Witness & Gen Hoshino Remixes)," elements from Neneh Cherry's 1988 single "Buffalo Stance" provide a hip-hop-inflected groove, while Art of Noise's 1983 instrumental "Moments in Love" contributes ambient string swells for emotional depth.[49]
- "Pretty Please (Masters at Work Remix)" draws from Cajmere's 1992 house track "Coffeepot (Percolator Mix)," incorporating its percolating percussion to amplify the remix's underground club vibe.[15]
- "Boys Will Be Boys (Zach Witness Remix)" samples Lyn Collins' 1972 funk classic "Think (About It)," using its raw, James Brown-produced drum breaks to inject high-energy soul into the track.[15]
- "Break My Heart (Jamiroquai, Cosmic Girl, Dimitri From Paris, Dubwize Remix)" features Jamiroquai's 1996 acid jazz hit "Cosmic Girl (Dimitri from Paris' Dubwise Remix)," layering its cosmic synths and bass to heighten the remix's interstellar disco feel.[15]
- "Hallucinate (Mr. Fingers Deep Stripped Mix)" includes vocal snippets from Gwen Stefani's 2005 track "Hollaback Girl" alongside Barbara Mason's 1969 soul ballad "Another Man," blending pop attitude with intimate R&B introspection.[15]
- "Hallucinate (Paul Woolford Extended Remix)" samples Larry Heard's 1988 deep house cut "The Sun Can't Compare (feat. Mr. White)," utilizing its warm pads and vocal ad-libs to create a hypnotic, sunset-club extension.[15]
- "Don't Start Now (Yaeji Remix)" pulls from Gaz's 1992 rave anthem "Sing Sing" for its euphoric synth stabs and Fingers Inc.'s 1988 Chicago house track "Bring Down the Walls" for gospel-tinged calls, fostering a sense of communal uplift.[15]
- "That Kind of Woman (Jacques Lu Cont Remix)" integrates an a cappella excerpt from Stevie Nicks' 1983 hit "Stand Back," weaving her ethereal vocals into the track's synth-pop framework for a mystical, 1980s revival.[15]
Personnel
Album Credits
Club Future Nostalgia features Dua Lipa as the primary vocalist on all tracks, with additional vocal performances by guest artists on select remixes.[51] The album's production centers on remixes of tracks from Dua Lipa's Future Nostalgia, curated and DJ-mixed by The Blessed Madonna, who also contributed to specific remixes.[4] Individual remixes were produced by a roster of electronic and house music producers, emphasizing club-oriented reinterpretations.[5]| Role | Personnel |
|---|---|
| Lead Vocals | Dua Lipa (all tracks)[51] |
| Additional Vocals | Madonna – featured vocals (Levitating [The Blessed Madonna Remix])[51] Missy Elliott – rap vocals (Levitating [The Blessed Madonna Remix])[51] Gwen Stefani – featured vocals (Physical [Mark Ronson Remix])[51] BLACKPINK – vocals (Kiss and Make Up [Kaytranada Remix])[51] Jamiroquai – vocals (Break My Heart [Dimitri from Paris Remix])[51] |
| DJ Mix & Executive Production | The Blessed Madonna (overall DJ mix; remix production on Levitating, Love Is Religion)[4] |
| Remix Production | Joe Goddard – remixer (Future Nostalgia)[51] Jayda G – remixer (Cool)[51] Gen Hoshino – remixer (Good in Bed)[51] Zach Witness – remixer (Good in Bed, Boys Will Be Boys)[51] Midland – remixer (Pretty Please)[51] Masters at Work – remixers (Hallucinate)[51] Horse Meat Disco – remixers (Love Again)[5] Dimitri from Paris – editor, remixer (Break My Heart)[51] Mr. Fingers – remixer (We're Good)[51] Paul Woolford – remixer (Hallucinate)[51] Yaeji – remixer (Levitating)[51] Mark Ronson – remixer (Physical)[51] Jacques Lu Cont (Stuart Price) – remixer (Don't Start Now)[51] Moodymann – remixer (Love Is Religion)[51] Kaytranada – remixer (Kiss and Make Up)[5] |
| Instrumentation (Key Contributors) | Stuart Price – keyboards, drum programming, guitar, bass (various remixes based on original productions)[5] Koz – synthesizer, drums, bass, guitar (Levitating, Physical)[5] Ian Kirkpatrick – drum programming, guitar, keyboards (Pretty Please)[5] Sg Lewis – drums, keyboards, guitar (Hallucinate)[5] Drew Jurecka – viola, violin (multiple tracks)[5] |
| Engineering & Mixing | Mike Dean – mixing, mastering (Levitating [The Blessed Madonna Remix] feat. Madonna & Missy Elliott)[52] Brandon Bost – mixing (select tracks)[5] |
| Mastering | Randy Merrill – mastering (overall album)[5] Matt Colton – mastering (select tracks)[5] |