Glory Days
Little Mix
Glory Days is the fourth studio album by British girl group Little Mix, released on November 18, 2016 through Syco and Columbia Records. Coming off the success of Get Weird, it pushed the group fully into mainstream dominance, debuting at No. 1 in the UK with around 96,000 copies sold in its first week—making it the fastest‑selling girl‑group album there since Spice Girls’ Spiceworld in 1997—and eventually becoming certified 4× platinum with over 1.2 million units sold. The record’s standard edition features tracks such as “Shout Out to My Ex,” “Touch,” “F.U,” “Oops” (featuring Charlie Puth), “Down & Dirty,” “Power,” “No More Sad Songs,” and “Nothing Else Matters,” while the later Platinum/Expanded editions add remixes, new songs (“Is Your Love Enough?,” “Dear Lover”), and a documentary, cementing Glory Days as the peak of their commercial era.
Musically, Glory Days is bright, confident pop built for radio and arenas, mixing tropical house, EDM‑influenced beats, and big empowerment anthems. “Shout Out to My Ex” operates as a turbo‑charged breakup kiss‑off, famously tied to Perrie Edwards’ split from Zayn Malik, with a soaring chorus that became a defining anthem of their career. “Touch” jumps on the tropical‑house wave but turns it into a career‑best song via an irresistibly simple hook layered over steel drums and panpipes, while “No More Sad Songs” and “F.U” explore the lingering pull of heartbreak and toxic relationships. The group’s love of empowerment bops reaches a high point with “Power,” an industrial pop track featuring Stormzy that throws everything into the mix—from pounding drums to surreal “motorbike” chants—and still lands as a rallying cry, capturing Little Mix at their most energetic and confident. As fans often note, Glory Days feels like the true “glory days” of Little Mix: a run of era‑defining singles, a massive tour, and an album that shows them at peak chart power and vocal cohesion.
Glory Days is the fourth studio album by British girl group Little Mix, released on November 18, 2016 through Syco and Columbia Records. Coming off the success of Get Weird, it pushed the group fully into mainstream dominance, debuting at No. 1 in the UK with around 96,000 copies sold in its first week—making it the fastest‑selling girl‑group album there since Spice Girls’ Spiceworld in 1997—and eventually becoming certified 4× platinum with over 1.2 million units sold. The record’s standard edition features tracks such as “Shout Out to My Ex,” “Touch,” “F.U,” “Oops” (featuring Charlie Puth), “Down & Dirty,” “Power,” “No More Sad Songs,” and “Nothing Else Matters,” while the later Platinum/Expanded editions add remixes, new songs (“Is Your Love Enough?,” “Dear Lover”), and a documentary, cementing Glory Days as the peak of their commercial era.
Musically, Glory Days is bright, confident pop built for radio and arenas, mixing tropical house, EDM‑influenced beats, and big empowerment anthems. “Shout Out to My Ex” operates as a turbo‑charged breakup kiss‑off, famously tied to Perrie Edwards’ split from Zayn Malik, with a soaring chorus that became a defining anthem of their career. “Touch” jumps on the tropical‑house wave but turns it into a career‑best song via an irresistibly simple hook layered over steel drums and panpipes, while “No More Sad Songs” and “F.U” explore the lingering pull of heartbreak and toxic relationships. The group’s love of empowerment bops reaches a high point with “Power,” an industrial pop track featuring Stormzy that throws everything into the mix—from pounding drums to surreal “motorbike” chants—and still lands as a rallying cry, capturing Little Mix at their most energetic and confident. As fans often note, Glory Days feels like the true “glory days” of Little Mix: a run of era‑defining singles, a massive tour, and an album that shows them at peak chart power and vocal cohesion.
Glory Days
Little Mix
Glory Days is the fourth studio album by British girl group Little Mix, released on November 18, 2016 through Syco and Columbia Records. Coming off the success of Get Weird, it pushed the group fully into mainstream dominance, debuting at No. 1 in the UK with around 96,000 copies sold in its first week—making it the fastest‑selling girl‑group album there since Spice Girls’ Spiceworld in 1997—and eventually becoming certified 4× platinum with over 1.2 million units sold. The record’s standard edition features tracks such as “Shout Out to My Ex,” “Touch,” “F.U,” “Oops” (featuring Charlie Puth), “Down & Dirty,” “Power,” “No More Sad Songs,” and “Nothing Else Matters,” while the later Platinum/Expanded editions add remixes, new songs (“Is Your Love Enough?,” “Dear Lover”), and a documentary, cementing Glory Days as the peak of their commercial era.
Musically, Glory Days is bright, confident pop built for radio and arenas, mixing tropical house, EDM‑influenced beats, and big empowerment anthems. “Shout Out to My Ex” operates as a turbo‑charged breakup kiss‑off, famously tied to Perrie Edwards’ split from Zayn Malik, with a soaring chorus that became a defining anthem of their career. “Touch” jumps on the tropical‑house wave but turns it into a career‑best song via an irresistibly simple hook layered over steel drums and panpipes, while “No More Sad Songs” and “F.U” explore the lingering pull of heartbreak and toxic relationships. The group’s love of empowerment bops reaches a high point with “Power,” an industrial pop track featuring Stormzy that throws everything into the mix—from pounding drums to surreal “motorbike” chants—and still lands as a rallying cry, capturing Little Mix at their most energetic and confident. As fans often note, Glory Days feels like the true “glory days” of Little Mix: a run of era‑defining singles, a massive tour, and an album that shows them at peak chart power and vocal cohesion.
Glory Days is the fourth studio album by British girl group Little Mix, released on November 18, 2016 through Syco and Columbia Records. Coming off the success of Get Weird, it pushed the group fully into mainstream dominance, debuting at No. 1 in the UK with around 96,000 copies sold in its first week—making it the fastest‑selling girl‑group album there since Spice Girls’ Spiceworld in 1997—and eventually becoming certified 4× platinum with over 1.2 million units sold. The record’s standard edition features tracks such as “Shout Out to My Ex,” “Touch,” “F.U,” “Oops” (featuring Charlie Puth), “Down & Dirty,” “Power,” “No More Sad Songs,” and “Nothing Else Matters,” while the later Platinum/Expanded editions add remixes, new songs (“Is Your Love Enough?,” “Dear Lover”), and a documentary, cementing Glory Days as the peak of their commercial era.
Musically, Glory Days is bright, confident pop built for radio and arenas, mixing tropical house, EDM‑influenced beats, and big empowerment anthems. “Shout Out to My Ex” operates as a turbo‑charged breakup kiss‑off, famously tied to Perrie Edwards’ split from Zayn Malik, with a soaring chorus that became a defining anthem of their career. “Touch” jumps on the tropical‑house wave but turns it into a career‑best song via an irresistibly simple hook layered over steel drums and panpipes, while “No More Sad Songs” and “F.U” explore the lingering pull of heartbreak and toxic relationships. The group’s love of empowerment bops reaches a high point with “Power,” an industrial pop track featuring Stormzy that throws everything into the mix—from pounding drums to surreal “motorbike” chants—and still lands as a rallying cry, capturing Little Mix at their most energetic and confident. As fans often note, Glory Days feels like the true “glory days” of Little Mix: a run of era‑defining singles, a massive tour, and an album that shows them at peak chart power and vocal cohesion.
