• Record Label: Island
  • Release Date: Dec 3, 2012
User Score
5.6

Mixed or average reviews- based on 62 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 35 out of 62
  2. Negative: 24 out of 62
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  1. Apr 12, 2019
    8
    actually a very good album. wouldn't call it the best album ever, but it deserves a better rating. tulisa really is underrated.
  2. Nov 10, 2016
    0
    I sat and listened to this for some reason, I still don't know why and I regret it and truly awful album. The people who come last on The X Factor live shows like Bratavio could do better so thats saying something. Tulisa either don't bother again or take a long time out like 7-10 years to think up something better.
  3. Jul 20, 2016
    10
    que piso na cadela da cheryl flopada sem talento
    esse album é tudo vão se foder seu bando de aidetico dando nota baixa
    se fosse album da rihanna desgraçada ia ter um monte de gente babando esse hinario
  4. Jun 10, 2016
    7
    "The Female Boss" isn't a bad album, but also not a great one. Tulisas's voice is really powerful and commercial, she can make good high notes, but I don't know why the producers abused so much with auto-tune. The album is pretty commercial and phonographic, but they don't made good choices for singles. In general, is a album normal pop/eletronic/dance album.
  5. Apr 22, 2015
    0
    Awful. Absolute tripe from start to finish. The lyrics, the music, the production, everything. I don't understand how did they choose her to be a judge on the X Factor, when she doesn't know how to achieve success herself.
  6. Oct 13, 2013
    0
    Horrendous album, definitely the worst British album of the past five years. It is a disgrace to pop music, she has no musical talent so I have no idea why she ever got chosen to judge others on the X Factor. It is set to be a huge chart flop so hopefully she will be not be around for longer.
  7. Apr 20, 2013
    0
    What a disgrace to music, shockingly abysmal album. Tulisa is a talentless wannabe chav who will forgotten in a year or 6 months, her lyrics are awful, the songs are terrible and cheesy, has a cheap and nasty sound
  8. Apr 17, 2013
    3
    It does its job, however it was done all wrong. For starters, she chose the wrong target audience females. By naming her album The Female Boss despite the negative media attention meant that she lost that target audience from there. She never had that market to begin with N-Dubz. Then the cringe worthy introduction and outro was awful and had nothing to do with the themes of her music. IfIt does its job, however it was done all wrong. For starters, she chose the wrong target audience females. By naming her album The Female Boss despite the negative media attention meant that she lost that target audience from there. She never had that market to begin with N-Dubz. Then the cringe worthy introduction and outro was awful and had nothing to do with the themes of her music. If she had targeted her audience as just young people having fun then her record sales would have increased because at this present time, she is not really respected as an artist, musician and shamefully enough, a woman. I doubt she will make a second album as this one was so horrible. Expand
  9. Mar 5, 2013
    10
    I Dont think at all this albums rating should be so low it is the best album ever in my opinion, tulisa worked hard on it it was hard for her to go solo and she has made a super fantastic alum that i love and it deserves 100 if you ask me ,it is just unreal and great basically i love it.
  10. Jan 13, 2013
    9
    Opening with some cheesey lines in "Intro", first impressions leave you skeptical as to what else is in store on "The Female Boss" -- then Tulisa's chart-topping "Young" kicks in. One thing that makes this album stand out from the crowd is the variety of different sounds, from ballads like "Skeletons" to urban-esque tracks like the infectious "British Swag" and "Visa". There are some sureOpening with some cheesey lines in "Intro", first impressions leave you skeptical as to what else is in store on "The Female Boss" -- then Tulisa's chart-topping "Young" kicks in. One thing that makes this album stand out from the crowd is the variety of different sounds, from ballads like "Skeletons" to urban-esque tracks like the infectious "British Swag" and "Visa". There are some sure hits on the album if dealt with correctly. With an almost perfect blend of slow and fast jams, "The Female Boss" is deserving of more praise than it has had; if only it was given the chance to be judged on the merits of the album rather than Tulisa's misjudged character, unfairly portrayed by the media. "Scream and Shout" would have earned it a deserving 10/10, if only Britney didn't take that hit from beneath her feet! A brilliant album overall -- "let's drink to it!" Expand
  11. Dec 12, 2012
    1
    I'm not keen on Tulisa. Even before she was a judge on X Factor, I didn't rate her highly and considered her judging placement so random. But, after taking Little Mix to victory last year, Tulisa has really established herself and after several years in the barely successful band, N-Dubz, she's decided that it's time to go the solo route. And after hearing the first few singles, I knewI'm not keen on Tulisa. Even before she was a judge on X Factor, I didn't rate her highly and considered her judging placement so random. But, after taking Little Mix to victory last year, Tulisa has really established herself and after several years in the barely successful band, N-Dubz, she's decided that it's time to go the solo route. And after hearing the first few singles, I knew this was going to be a great listen purely for comedy value, so I tried it. And boy, is it a stinker.
    We start off with Tulisa speaking some cliched "inspirational" feminist speech (with a weird pause, I might add) over a piano composition, which automatically sets her up for failure as already she's taking herself far too seriously. And what follows are tracks that define scraping the bottom of the barrel. There's the We Found Love rip-off #1 single, Young, the cheesy faux-urban Live It Up and the bland, lifeless Damn. But then we get the Holy Grail of bad music, the cringey, epically bad British Swag (if ever there were two words that should never be coupled together...) where Tulisa brags to a non-existent American audience: "I'm all about my dollars, but I specialise in pounds." She is truly one of the finest un-intentional comedians ever. Then there's the bizarre ballad, Foreigner, that's meant to be anti-racism but is executed so badly that it comes off like the opposite with analogies that really make you feel uncomfortable. Speaking of ballads, it may surprise you that, not including the interludes, half of the album consists of ballads and dear me, they're as bland and boring as watching paint dry and her voice is average at best, not the type that can be showcased on a ballad. Even the Diane Warren-written song, Counterfeit, couldn't be salvaged. I'm sure that such tracks will not impress Tulisa's fans who were expecting lots of dance music, considering that Young was the lead single. The only upsides are club banger Live Your Life, the spiritual sounding Skeletons and the genuinely sad Habit. But even then, they're not amazing, just not bad. By the time Tulisa rounds it all off with her cheesy Outro, you just want to laugh at her delusions of fame. She needs to drop this "Female Boss" alias schtick. No one, not even her fans, are buying into it. While she co-wrote almost the entire album, she is not an artist as she always insists on calling herself. She is a product, nothing more.
    Tulisa is way out of her depth and it looks like the dream's over before it even got started. The album debuted on the UK singles chart at an appalling #35 with just over 15,000 copies sold and where it'll chart next week is anyone's guess. And it wasn't like she had no promotion, she had the best promotion she could get and it still wasn't enough. This proves that Tulisa is in no position to be an X Factor judge. How can she give contestants advice about how to be successful when she doesn't know how to achieve it herself? Even Dappy's solo album managed a surprising #6 on the charts with no X Factor or Britain's Got Talent promotion. If rumours of an N-Dubz reunion are true, it looks like Tulisa needs them more than they need her. Here's a comeback to the last words on her outro: "If it doesn't work out......give up."
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  12. Dec 4, 2012
    8
    In recent years, it has sort of become the norm for X-Factor judges to release their own material once on the show. Tulisa is no exception. However, this led to speculation about the quality of her music. She has an unremarkable voice, but in "The Female Boss", something actually struck me.

    The listener is introduced into the world of female bosses by means of deep, emotional piano
    In recent years, it has sort of become the norm for X-Factor judges to release their own material once on the show. Tulisa is no exception. However, this led to speculation about the quality of her music. She has an unremarkable voice, but in "The Female Boss", something actually struck me.

    The listener is introduced into the world of female bosses by means of deep, emotional piano notes. What's really not deep is the cliche speech Tulisa gives about "inna beauty". After Young, Live It Up and Damn conclude, the dance feel of the album is dissipated. I'm not saying that "British Swag" is not infectious (because it is indeed an album highlight), but it was misplaced in the album. As the album progresses, I became intoxicated with certain songs such as Counterfeit and I'm Ready. All in all, I found the album to be quite an outstanding collection of music.

    HOWEVER..........if you don't have an eclectic love for pop music, DO NOT purchase the album because it doesn't suit you. There's a sound for everything on this album, which makes it so love-able.

    Personally, I would have left some songs out. Steal My Breath Away, Foreigner and Kill Me Tonight were songs which I felt do not go with the rest of the album. I think they are the filler tracks on "The Female Boss".

    Conclusion: Excellent debut with songs which can become hits effortlessly (Live Your Life, Visa). An enjoyable and warm collection which can have huge success depending on its management.
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Metascore
35

Generally unfavorable reviews - based on 6 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 0 out of 6
  2. Negative: 2 out of 6
  1. Jan 7, 2013
    30
    A lamentable debut all round.
  2. Q Magazine
    Dec 11, 2012
    40
    Tulisa struggles to get to grips with the predictably generic R&B ballads, but when the pace is upped and she shouts along to Young and the feisty M.I.A.-lite Live It Up, the personality that has turned her into a phenomenon of out times transcends her obvious limitations. [Jan 2013, p.112]
  3. 40
    The few redeeming moments come when she ceases her bellowing and shows a little restraint, as on the surprisingly likable Skeletons.