", the 1978's hit single by American singer-songwriter
Bobby Caldwell. She would later collaborate with Caldwell on his 2015 project
Cool Uncle's single "Break Away". Except for the fifth track "No to Love", which was written and produced solely by Okumu, Ware co-wrote most of the album tracks' lyrics. Production for
Devotion came primarily from
Dave Okumu of
alternative rock band
the Invisible, whom produced twelve out of fourteen original recordings used for the album. Fellow British
house record producer
Julio Bashmore and singer
Kid Harpoon also co-produced along with Okumu, with Bashmore handling solely the production of "
110%" and
Wilma Archer co-producing the eleventh track "Something Inside". Fellow UK musician and collaborator
Sampha and Hassan Hamandi also contributed to two songs from the deluxe edition of the album, namely "Strangest Feeling" and "
What You Won't Do for Love", with the former being released digitally on 14 October 2011 and the latter being premiered on 22 May 2012. Sampha was also credited as a collaborator on "Valentine", a song released previously on 14 February 2011 with Ware. The song was partly inspired by
James Blake's song "
The Wilhelm Scream" and based on both Ware and Sampha's own personal experiences in love.
Devotion opens with the eponymous album track, a "dark and dense" song that hints at "passion's underbelly" with deep bass hit that portraits sonic signature by Okumu. The second track "Wildest Moments" is a "boomy, earthy beats" epic ballad that sings about the strength of friendship, with lyrics such as "From the outside/Everyone's always wondering why we fight/Why do we fight?" and Ware's vocal being a "balancing act" between "gorgeous, bell-like"
synths and chiming piano chords. The song was among the "most festival-ready songs-- big hooks, bigger drums" produced by Kid Harpoon for the album. It was followed by the first single "Running", which saw Ware "slinks and sighs" over a
yacht-rock groove, "explodes at a key moment, then backs off again for an affecting conclusion", gaining comparisons to that of
Sade for her "poised and pure" voice over "drums echo" and "repeated guitar lick" which gave the song a "lovely, sultry" sound. The eight track of the album "Sweet Talk" is hailed as the record's most classically "
pop" song, which finds Ware pleading "Don't keep me with the kisses, there's never any there when I need," and hints at a "
Whitney Houston-like
belt, but keeps it constrained" within the song's "chilly" synths line, "stuttering" drum machine shuffle and "gentle, neon-lit"
Rhodes piano riff. Meanwhile, the album's fourth track "Still Love Me" contains "growing loop" of effects and instruments that recalled the work of her previous collaborator SBKTRT, while "No to Love" is a song that contains "
grungy guitar
loops,
ADD beats, and
rap verse from a
Flight of the Conchords sound-alike" was the album's only featured guest upon its re-release for the remix of Ware's "
Wildest Moments". The album's ninth track, "110%", is a "gorgeously restrained summer smash" and "
bubbly, even-keeled
house" song Ware co-wrote with producer Bashmore. Originally contained a distorted sample from late Puerto-Rican / American rapper
Big Pun's song "The Dream Shatterer", it was later changed following a dispute over the used sample, and eventually led to Ware re-titling the song to "If You're Never Gonna Move." The track remains all but unchanged, save for altering that loop into a similar voice laying down the line "coming on a mission like a warhead." The song was described as a "sugar rush dance-floor gem", with "bubbling"
synth bass and "quicksilver"
percussion that sees Ware singing about "a girl trying to get him off his throne and dance." According to the singer, both her and Bashmore were inspired to create "110%" after seeing Big Pun in a "yellow
PVC suit" while sitting on a throne in a
hip-hop magazine. It was followed by "Taking in Water", a "powerhouse" pop ballad with "soul, passion and intelligence" that recalls the "great" influence from Whitney Houston. With "Imagine It Was Us", the album's only new song on its re-issue edition, Ware offers her "most fun" tune with the "slinky, sultry
'90s-style" house track that joins "the charge of
disco revolution." It was co-written by Ware, Bashmore, Brey Baptista, Dave Corney and
Jimmy Napes, with the latter most known for his work with musician duo
Disclosure and fellow British singer-songwriter
Sam Smith. In addition, "Wildest Moments" received another remix with guest verses by American rapper A$AP Rocky, making it her first song to have a feature artist. The rapper previously shared with
BBC that he was "eager" to work with Ware, having acknowledged the singer since "last summer" and expressing his reason to collaborate. In an interview with
The Juice, Ware revealed that she "loved" the rapper and wanted a guest rapper on "Wildest Moments" for the US release of the album. As the singer was at the States promoting and Mayers promoting his record in the United Kingdom, Ware sent the track to the rapper for a collaboration, eventually received an email with Mayers' verses just before the deadline to turn over the project. == Singles and promotion ==