Yellow Flicker Beat

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"Yellow Flicker Beat"
Asbury Park)
Genre
Length3:52
LabelRepublic
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)
Lorde singles chronology
"Glory and Gore"
(2014)
"Yellow Flicker Beat"
(2014)
"Magnets"
(2015)
The Hunger Games singles chronology
"We Remain"
(2013)
"Yellow Flicker Beat"
(2014)
"The Hanging Tree"
(2014)
Music video
"Yellow Flicker Beat" on
YouTube

"Yellow Flicker Beat" is a song by New Zealand singer-songwriter

dystopian
novel trilogy.

"Yellow Flicker Beat" was well received by

Best Song at the Critics' Choice Awards
.

Composition and release

"Yellow Flicker Beat" references the rise of The Hunger Games' heroine Katniss Everdeen, portrayed by Jennifer Lawrence (pictured in 2015)

"Yellow Flicker Beat" was written by

synthesisers,[5] drums,[5] and vocal samples in its production.[6]

The song's lyrics refer to the rise of

dystopian novel trilogy.[4] Beginning in a slow and measured way, the song features the "touched by pain" lyrics—"I'm a princess cut from marble / smoother than a storm." As the drums start, Lorde sings "This is the start". Zuel opined that the line was "also the beginning of the end of something".[3] Carley noted that the lines, "The scars that mark my body / They're silver and gold" and "My blood is a flood of rubies, precious stones" showcased "a big step towards more mature lyrics" on Lorde's part.[7] Music critics compared its production to the singer's work on her 2013 debut album Pure Heroine.[4]

On 31 July 2014, it was announced that Lorde would be the

engineered by Matt Wiggins and Erik Kase Romero.[10] The song was released digitally on the iTunes Stores worldwide by Republic Records on 29 September 2014.[11] The same day, it was sent to Italian contemporary hit radio[12] and US adult album alternative (AAA) and modern rock stations.[13]

Critical reception

"Yellow Flicker Beat" received mostly positive reviews from

Best Song at the 20th Critics' Choice Awards.[16] The song was ranked the 18th greatest song of 2014 by Australian alternative music station Triple J.[17]

Commercial performance

In the United States, "Yellow Flicker Beat" debuted at number 17 on the Billboard's

Adult Alternative Songs at number 19 with 5.2 million radio audience impressions in its first week.[18] On the Billboard Hot 100, the single peaked at number 34.[19] "Yellow Flicker Beat" also charted on several national record charts, including Australia,[20] Canada,[21] Ireland,[22] and the United Kingdom.[23] The single was a success in New Zealand, peaking at number four on the New Zealand Singles Chart.[24] It was certified platinum by the Recorded Music NZ,[25] and the Australian Recording Industry Association (ARIA) for selling 15,000 and 70,000 units, respectively.[26]

Music video

Lorde and other guests dressed in formal clothing at a cocktail party as they smile to a camera
This scene shows Lorde and other guests at a cocktail party smiling upwards toward the camera. Several critics compared the visual to the ending of the 1980 horror film The Shining.[27]

The

NZDT), when Lorde turned eighteen years old.[29] Lorde contacted Bock via email after they met through Devon Welsh, the frontman of Majical Cloudz, her opening band on the Pure Heroine Tour.[30] The video was filmed in New Jersey and at Park Avenue Armory in New York during New York Fashion Week in between shows by American designers Marc Jacobs and Tommy Hilfiger. Lorde's production team built each set and shot the video in one day.[30] The concept of the video was inspired by a 1976 interview from The Dick Cavett Show with American actress Mae West.[30]

The video begins with Lorde singing in a faintly lit motel room,[31] with a television displaying static and an unattended running car facing the window. The singer is styled in a white dress shirt, black slacks and her hair in a pompadour.[32] The clip then showcases Lorde looking away from the camera in a room surrounded with potted plants. The camera moves away towards a dark, abandoned road filled by smoke with only one street light beaming on the singer.[33] As the chorus begins, a group of teenagers form a circle and point a flashlight at Lorde as she dances inside a hangar, which critics described as "twitchy" and "witchy".[34] In the next scene, the singer sits alone on the edge of a dark-lit public swimming pool.[31] She then arrives at a cocktail party where she falls into what critics described as a "surreal cliff";[35] the singer revealed that she cut her foot filming this scene.[36] The next shows her dancing besides a white curtain. The video ends with her sitting alone on a bus stop bench as the camera pans away.

The video received positive reviews from critics; it was praised for its concept but criticised for not incorporating footage from the film.

Slant writer Alexa Camp stated that her performance in the video showed "elegance and sophistication."[42] The scene where Lorde and other guests smile toward a camera at a cocktail party was compared to the ending of the 1980 horror film The Shining.[27]

Live performances

Lorde singing to a microphone onstage dressed in a red-colored outfit
Lorde performing live at the Hearst Greek Theatre in Berkeley, California (2014)

On 2 October 2014, Lorde performed "Yellow Flicker Beat" for the first time at Hearst Greek Theatre in Berkeley, California.[43] Later that month, she sang the song at the Austin City Limits Festival.[44] The overall performance was praised.[45] It was also performed as part of Lorde's Melodrama World Tour (2017–2018) during the North American arena leg.[46]

Lorde performed the song at the 2014 American Music Awards on 23 November 2014.[47] She began the performance by singing inside an "orange-lit box". Halfway through the song, the box was lifted, revealing Lorde wearing a white crop top and black pants outfit to the audience. She was accompanied by a group of white-clad dancers.[48] She ended by smearing her lipstick on-stage.[49] The performance was highly praised, particularly Lorde's stage presence and was considered one of the night's best by several publications.[50][49][51] Miles Raymer of Entertainment Weekly gave the performance an A, writing that despite being the show's "most awkward moment", Lorde delivered a "dose of bracing weirdness".[52] Rolling Stone compared her "thrashing and headbanging" to the music video of Nine Inch Nails' 1994 song "March of the Pigs". The publication also praised the singer's "exquisitely intimate and intense" moments inside the box in which she performed.[50]

Kanye West rework

"Flicker (Kanye West Rework)"
YouTube

Lorde and American rapper Kanye West produced a version of the song titled "Flicker (Kanye West Rework)", included on the film's soundtrack album, at a studio in Malibu, California.[53] The track was made available for purchase on 11 November 2014.[54] The pair first met in London after they made an appearance on Later... with Jools Holland in 2013.[55] Talking about the collaboration with West, Lorde commented, "He's so private I feel weird talking about how he does stuff. I feel lucky to even be in a room with him."[56]

"Flicker (Kanye West Rework)" was described as a

bass,[59] piano,[60] electronic drums,[61] and synthesizers in its production.[60] The track slows the tempo of the original song,[62] incorporates a choir,[62] but does not feature West's vocals.[63] Several music critics compared its production to West's work on his 2013 album Yeezus.[64] Christopher Hooton, writing for The Independent, called it "understated and beautiful".[65] Stereogum writer James Rettig described the rework as "grandiose and ominous".[66] Billboard's Zach Dionne compared its instrumentation to West's singles "Clique" (2012) and "Runaway" (2010).[67] Spin ranked the track at number 69 on their list of the 101 Best Kanye West-Produced Songs That Don't Feature Kanye.[68]

Track listings

Digital download[11]
  1. "Yellow Flicker Beat" – 3:52
Kanye West rework[54]
  1. "Flicker (Kanye West Rework)" – 4:12

Credits and personnel

Credits adapted from the liner notes of

The Hunger Games: Mockingjay, Part 1 (Original Motion Picture Soundtrack) and Tidal.[69][70]

Recording and management

Personnel

Charts and certifications

Radio and release history

Region Date Format Label
Australia[11] 29 September 2014 Digital download Republic
Belgium[90]
Canada[91]
Finland[92]
Germany[93]
New Zealand[94]
Portugal[95]
Spain[96]
Switzerland[97]
United Kingdom[98]
United States[99]
Italy[12] Contemporary hit radio Universal
United States[13] Adult album alternative
Modern rock

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External links