Article snapshot taken from[REDACTED] with creative commons attribution-sharealike license.
Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat.
We can research this topic together.
The album was generally well received among music critics. Metacritic assigned it an average score of 66 out of 100, based on 13 reviews. Will Hermes of Rolling Stone touted the album writing, "4×4=12 is audacious, mixing generic house grooves with electric fare." Many reviewers praised the album for its universal appeal to a diverse audience. Annie Zaleski of Alternative Press wrote, "The collection is mostly instrumental tracks, ranging in style from insistent progressive house to watery techno…Without vocals to provide structure, 4×4=12's variety stems from deadmau5's sense of dynamics and pacing, as well as his diverse sonic influences". However, some critics seem to be wanting more from the artist whose man-behind-the-mask intrigue may be upstaging his albums. Allison Stewart of The Washington Post states, ""4×4" is a breakthrough album that doesn't feel like a breakthrough album. Not accessible or crowd-pleasing enough to court non-electronic music fans, not adventurous enough to satisfy die-hards, it pleases, but it rarely dazzles." Dave Simpson of The Guardian shared in Ms. Stewart's sentiments by noting, "Undoubtedly, the deadmau5 appeal hinges on the astonishing live show in which Zimmerman performs in a giant, illuminated mouse's head, but it wouldn't work without his tracks. His third production compilation again shows that he is a master at doing simple electro house music very well: humongous beats and basslines blend with straightforward chord progressions and, when interest may start to lag, sonic diversions."
Commercial reception
4×4=12 proved to become a breakthrough commercial success for deadmau5 when it became his first studio album to chart on the Billboard Top 200. It eventually peaked within the top fifty of the Billboard Top 200 and has spent over 100 weeks on the chart. It also narrowly missed the top spot of the Billboard Electronic albums, reaching number two. Internationally, the album was received warmly as well. It managed to chart within the top forty of various European nations, replicating and in many cases eclipsing the chart success of his previous efforts. In the United Kingdom, however, the album achieved a lower peak compared to his previous albums which all entered the top twenty, missing the top forty altogether.
"Raise Your Weapon (Edit)" (featuring Greta Svabo Bech)
6:57
11.
"One Trick Pony" (featuring SOFI)
3:59
12.
"Everything Before"
6:36
iTunes music videos
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Some Chords" (live from Brixton)
3:27
2.
"Sofi Needs a Ladder" (live from Brixton)
6:30
3.
"Cthulhu Sleeps" (live from Brixton)
9:23
4.
"Bad Selection" (live from Brixton)
4:39
5.
"Right This Second" (live from Brixton)
3:45
US and Canada iTunes version
No.
Title
Length
1.
"4×4=12 (Continuous Mix)"
1:09:54
2.
"Some Chords"
6:55
3.
"Sofi Needs a Ladder" (featuring SOFI)
6:41
4.
"A City in Florida"
5:40
5.
"Bad Selection"
5:33
6.
"Animal Rights" (with Wolfgang Gartner)
6:15
7.
"I Said (Michael Woods Remix)" (with Chris Lake)
7:06
8.
"Cthulhu Sleeps"
9:59
9.
"Right This Second"
6:50
10.
"Raise Your Weapon (Edit)" (featuring Greta Svabo Bech)
6:57
11.
"One Trick Pony" (featuring SOFI)
3:59
12.
"Everything Before"
6:36
iTunes music videos
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Some Chords" (live from Brixton)
3:27
2.
"Sofi Needs a Ladder" (live from Brixton)
6:30
3.
"Cthulhu Sleeps" (live from Brixton)
9:23
4.
"Bad Selection" (live from Brixton)
4:39
5.
"Right This Second" (live from Brixton)
3:45
Double LP version
Side A
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Sofi Needs a Ladder" (featuring SOFI)
6:43
2.
"A City in Florida"
5:40
3.
"Animal Rights" (with Wolfgang Gartner)
6:15
Side B
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Cthulhu Sleeps"
10:35
2.
"Some Chords"
7:23
Side C
No.
Title
Length
1.
"I Said (Michael Woods Remix)" (with Chris Lake)
7:06
2.
"Bad Selection"
5:33
3.
"Right This Second"
7:48
Side D
No.
Title
Length
1.
"Raise Your Weapon" (featuring Greta Svabo Bech)
8:20
2.
"One Trick Pony" (featuring SOFI)
3:59
3.
"Everything Before"
6:36
Singles
"Some Chords" was released as the first official single from the album on 3 May 2010 exclusively on Beatport. "Animal Rights", a collaboration with Wolfgang Gartner, was the second single from the album, released exclusively on Beatport on 6 September 2010 and followed by a wide release on 17 September 2010. The third single was "Sofi Needs a Ladder", released on 31 October 2010. It features vocals from SOFI and is the highest charting single in the UK, reaching #68.
Promotion
Deadmau5 was the house DJ at the 2010 MTV Video Music Award show hosted by Chelsea Handler in Los Angeles, California on 12 September. He opened the event with "Some Chords", then as the night progressed, he played "Sofi Needs a Ladder", "Cthulhu Sleeps", and "Animal Rights". Deadmau5 also performed at the 54th Grammy Awards in 2012. First he performed with Foo Fighters ("Rope" deadmau5 Remix) and then played "Raise Your Weapon". On the same day after the awards he revealed two new mau5heads.
On iTunes, the international mixed CD version of the album has the track names "A City In Florida" as "City In Florida", "Cthulhu Sleeps" as "Cthulhu Steps" and "Raise Your Weapon" as "Raise Your Weapons". This has not been confirmed as intentional or unintentional.
"Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2 May 2012. Retrieved 2012-01-25. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
"Archived copy". Archived from the original on 11 May 2011. Retrieved 2010-05-09. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)