Do You Know Who You Are Out of Song

2019 single past Harry Styles

2019 single by Harry Styles

"Lights Upwards"
A dimly lit photo of Harry Styles showing his bare chest with two tattoos below each shoulder. The title of the song "Lights Up" is written in all caps in white at the center of the photo.
Single by Harry Styles
from the album Fine Line
B-side "Do You lot Know Who You Are?"
Released 11 Oct 2019 (2019-10-eleven)
Studio
  • The Cave, Nashville
  • EastWest, Los Angeles
  • Henson, Hollywood
Genre
  • Popular
  • R&B
Length two:52
Label
  • Erskine
  • Columbia
Songwriter(s)
  • Harry Styles
  • Thomas Hull
  • Tyler Johnson
Producer(s)
  • Tyler Johnson
  • Thomas Hull
Harry Styles singles chronology
"Kiwi"
(2017)
"Lights Up"
(2019)
"Admire Y'all"
(2019)
Music video
"Lights Upwardly" on YouTube

"Lights Upward" is a song past English vocalist Harry Styles from his second studio album Fine Line (2019). It was written by Styles alongside its producers Tyler Johnson and Kid Harpoon. Erskine Records and Columbia Records released the vocal for digital download and streaming on eleven October 2019 as the album's atomic number 82 single. Musically, "Lights Upwardly" is a popular and R&B song, featuring multilayered guitars, piano, programmed beats, and a gospel choir. Conceived by Styles after a period of self-reflection, the lyrics are about cocky-discovery and him embracing his ain identity.

Critics found Styles'southward musical direction refreshing and commented on the song's anarchistic construction which is equanimous of several breakup pre-choruses and post-choruses, and a single chorus. A few others criticised the song as forgettable. In the United kingdom of great britain and northern ireland, the single reached number three on the UK Singles Nautical chart and was certified Platinum by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI). Information technology also peaked in the top xx and received Platinum certifications in Australia, Canada, and the The states. Vincent Haycock directed the vocal'due south music video, which features Styles dancing shirtless in a sweat-drenched crowd of people.

Writing and production [edit]

Kid Harpoon performing with a microphone and guitar

Formerly a fellow member of the boy band One Direction, Harry Styles emerged as a solo artist in 2017 with his self-titled debut studio album, which heavily incorporated a 1970s rock-influenced sound.[1] During an interview with Zane Lowe of Apple Music, Styles admitted that he was stressed while making his debut album.[2] He said: "When I listen to the showtime anthology at present, I tin can hear all of the places where I feel similar I was playing it safe, because I just didn't want to get it incorrect".[ii] He disliked feeling obligated to create a record to appease the listeners and decided to be "more fun and audacious" with his adjacent project.[two] [3] For his second anthology Fine Line, released in 2019, Styles enlisted producers Tyler Johnson and Kid Harpoon, with whom he had worked on his debut album.[four] [v] A pop rock record encompassing power pop, folk rock, psychedelic pop, and funk influences,[6] [7] [8] Fine Line turned out to be more than experimental than his debut album, according to Vocalization 's Alexa Lee.[nine] The song "Lights Upward" has a more pop-like sound than the songs on Harry Styles.[10] [11] [12]

While talking to Rolling Stone mag, Styles said that "Lights Up" was created later "a long period of self-reflection, cocky-acceptance".[4] It was conceived during songwriting sessions for the album in the first quarter of 2019.[4] Styles wrote the song with Johnson and Harpoon,[13] who is credited nether his birth name Thomas Hull in the liner notes.[fourteen] Production was handled past all the songwriters except Styles.[thirteen]

The recording took place in The Cave Studio in Nashville, EastWest Studios in Los Angeles, and Henson Recording in Hollywood. Johnson programmed the track and played drums, bass guitar, acoustic guitar, and keyboards; Harpoon also played electrical guitar and provided additional production while Ivan Jackson played the horns. Johnson, Jeremy Hatcher, Nick Lobel, and Sammy Witte engineered the vocal with Matt Tuggle and Matt Wallick. Jon Castelli mixed it with assist from Ingmar Carlson at The Gift Shop in Los Angeles. Randy Merrill mastered it at Sterling Sound Studios in Edgewater, New Jersey.[14]

Music and lyrics [edit]

"Lights Up" is a pop[10] [15] and R&B song,[16] [17] with a length of 2 minutes and 52 seconds.[eighteen] Critic Jon Caramanica of The New York Times characterised its sound as "somewhere between '70s soft stone, lite disco and indie pop".[19] Forth with these, NME 's Hannah Mylrea noted soul influences in the song.[7] The rails incorporates multilayered guitars, piano, and programmed beats with a supple bassline.[10] [xx] [21] The refrain is accompanied by a gospel choir.[22] The Independent 's Roisin O'Connor said the rails has "California Dreamin'" vibes and psychedelic grooves.[23] Slate writer Chris Molanphy described the vocal as "lightly strummed beach music with ethereal backing vocals".[24]

"Lights Up" eschews traditional song structures and is composed of several breakdown pre-choruses and post-choruses, and a single chorus.[25] The song opens with a 17-second instrumental introduction, which is followed past a beat at 00:19 and and then the rail'south opening verse. A guitar-driven pitch drift takes identify at 00:28, and is accompanied by Styles's tightly tuned vocals.[26] His vocalisation is distorted in the pre-chorus.[27] [28] The central chorus, which begins at 1:18, is uptempo and uses a repeating lead-vocal melody and lyric; it is led by a backing-vocal refrain that begins with "Shine".[26] The track reaches a crescendo presently before the outro.[25] The song uses a layered vocal texture with a doubling of vocal lines at the upper and lower octaves.[26] O'Connor described Styles'southward vocals as "surprisingly airy", which she said contrast with his "sharper commitment" in his earlier work.[23] Critics from Billboard,[29] The Guardian,[21] MTV News,[30] and The New York Times compared the song'south musical style to that of the psychedelic music group Tame Impala,[20] while those from NME and Diverseness said that it sounded like the early works of the R&B-pop vocaliser Justin Timberlake.[31] [32]

The lyrics of "Lights Up" talk over self-discovery and self-acceptance.[12] [xxx] [31] Some critics thought the song was a commentary on Styles's fame.[23] [33] In the song, Styles embraces his own identity, singing "Lights up and they know who you lot are / Know who you are / Practice you lot know who you are?"[12] [31] The lyrics in the refrain accept a personal revelation from him: "Step into the light ... I'm not ever going back".[1] According to Laura Snapes of The Guardian, he talks through a "conflicted inner monologue" and the lyrics detect "him and a former partner talking at cantankerous-purposes around the void of a human relationship".[one] Now writer Rea McNamara said that the song was "an all-too-brief ode to self-dearest and letting get",[34] and in the words of Vulture critic Craig Jenkins, it is about "piercing the darkness in our hearts with radiant light".[10] Tallahassee Democrat 'due south Jia Alonso and The Washington Postal service 's Anying Guo associated the song's lyrics to be vaguely about Styles's sexuality.[35] [36] Editorials reviews by Paper and Time noted a melancholic border to the lyrics.[12] [xvi]

Release and promotion [edit]

Prior to the release of "Lights Up", Styles launched a campaign on ten October 2019, World Mental Wellness Solar day.[37] [38] Billboards begetting the Columbia Records logo and the explanation "Do You Know Who You Are?", were erected in London and New York.[32] [39] The billboards also bore the acronym "TPWK" (Care for People with Kindness), a phrase that had earlier been used on the trade of Harry Styles: Alive on Tour.[39] [40] The explanation was subsequently revealed as the title of the song "Treat People with Kindness" from the album Fine Line.[41] A website titled with the same phrase was too set up up; it offered compliments to users who entered their names into it.[42] [43] Styles announced the championship of the single on his Instagram business relationship with a photo of himself.[33] Erskine Records and Columbia Records released "Lights Upward" for digital download and streaming on xi October 2019 in diverse countries every bit the pb single from his second album Fine Line.[5] [18] The aforementioned day, the song was added to a BBC Radio 1 playlist,[44] and contemporary striking radio stations in Commonwealth of australia and Italian republic.[45] [46] A limited-edition 7-inch single containing a new rails called "Do Y'all Know Who Yous Are? (Locked Groove)" on the B-side was issued worldwide in early 2020.[47]

On 16 Nov 2019, Styles delivered his first performance of "Lights Upward" on Sat Night Live, along with "Watermelon Saccharide".[48] For the performance, he rendered "Lights Upwardly" in a stripped-down, R&B fashion; he was accompanied past a trumpeter, backing vocalists, and a live band.[49] [50] [51] Hilary Hughes of Billboard praised the functioning, writing: "With piffling more than the pianoforte, an acoustic guitar, a trumpet and the intricate harmonies of his back-up singers, Styles belted every high note and danced to the crush of the song'south bridge".[49] Styles performed the track again on After... with Jools The netherlands on 21 Nov and at Upper-case letter FM'southward Jingle Bell Ball on 7 December.[52] [53] The song was included on the setlist of his ane-night concert at the Forum in Los Angeles on 13 December to promote the release of Fine Line.[54] On 18 December, Styles performed the unmarried on BBC Radio i's Live Lounge segment.[55] On 29 February the following year, he sang it at the Music Hall of Williamsburg for Sirius XM and Pandora's secret session.[56]

Critical reception [edit]

Some critics commended Styles for experimenting with different styles.[1] [xvi] [21] Fourth dimension and Vulture named "Lights Upward" equally one of the all-time songs of its release week.[sixteen] [17] Snapes praised the song'southward refreshing sound that distinguished Styles from his British male contemporaries and from the "narcotised" synth-pop-dominated sounds of that year,[1] with Time 's Raisa Bruner regarding information technology as an example of his versatility.[16] Caramanica described "Lights Upwards" as a generous return to the popular that played to Styles'south strengths.[19] The Atlantic 's Spencer Koornhaber said the runway rendered the blazon of eerie still simple listening territory that had seldom been explored since Donovan's "Mellow Yellow".[57] O'Connor called it Styles'south most self-confident song still.[23] To explain this viewpoint, she highlighted that Styles'south identity frequently felt lost in the center of musical tropes on his debut anthology. Contrastingly, O'Connor argued that "Lights Up" stood out on its ain.[23]

Critics also commented on the song's unconventional structure and system. According to Pitchfork writer Anna Gaca, the track was "designed to wriggle through the strictures of pop songwriting",[27] and Chris DeVille from Stereogum claimed that information technology showed Styles's power to "toy around with attainable sounds without descending into the blasé".[58] The detailed organisation of horns, congas, and choir on the song was noted approvingly by Disharmonism editor Susan Hansen, who selected "Lights Up" as the best track on Fine Line and praised its "subtle, but astute build up".[8] In a like vein, Loiuse Bruton from The Irish gaelic Times complimented the song production-wise.[22] Diversity 's Chris Willman picked it as one of the "singled-out modern outliers" on the album, aslope "Admire You lot" and "Watermelon Sugar".[59]

Andrew Unterberger was more than disquisitional in his review for Billboard in which he singled out the song'southward direction as deceptive and wrote that the rail "never quite tells you where it'due south going then leaves you off somewhere you don't even recognise".[sixty] Tim Sendra of AllMusic called the single "inoffensive and sugariness", maxim it was "but saved from the skip button by the ever impressive vocals".[61] Paste writer Ellen Johnson dismissed information technology as not "necessarily anything special".[62]

Commercial functioning [edit]

"Lights Up" entered and peaked at number three on the 18 October 2019 issue of the UK Singles Chart,[63] Styles's 2nd acme-10 entry on the chart after "Sign of the Times" (2017).[64] In July 2021, the British Phonographic Industry (BPI) certified the song Platinum for 600,000 rail-equivalent units.[65] The song reached number 4 on the Irish gaelic Singles Chart, condign Styles'southward 2nd Irish top-10 entry.[66] In Australia, the song charted at number vii on the singles nautical chart,[67] and was certified Platinum by the Australian Recording Manufacture Association (ARIA) for sales exceeding lxx,000 units.[68] The song peaked in the same position in New Zealand[69] and received a Gold certification from Recorded Music NZ (RMNZ).[70]

In the United States, "Lights Up" debuted and peaked at number 17 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart dated 26 October 2019, accumulating 21.5 meg streams and twenty,000 download sales in its opening week.[71] It was Styles's 2nd Hot 100 nautical chart appearance post-obit "Sign of the Times".[72] The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) certified the song Platinum for track-equivalent sales of 1 million units.[73] In Canada, "Lights Up" peaked at number 14 on the Hot 100 and was certified Platinum by Music Canada.[74] [75] The vocal reached number iii in Lithuania,[76] number four in Greece and Latvia,[77] [78] number six in both Scotland and Slovakia,[79] [80] and number nine in Hungary.[81] It peaked inside the top 20 at number 12 in Republic of iceland,[82] number xiv in Singapore,[83] number fifteen in Malaysia and Sweden,[84] [85] number 16 in Austria and Norway,[86] [87] number 20 in Finland;[88] and peaked within the pinnacle 40 in Kingdom of denmark,[89] Italian republic,[90] holland,[91] Poland,[92] Portugal,[93] and Switzerland.[94] In Brazil, the unmarried was certified Diamond.[95]

Music video [edit]

Vincent Haycock directed the music video for "Lights Up", which was filmed in Mexico Urban center in Baronial 2019.[96] [97] It premiered on Styles'south Vevo account on 11 Oct 2019, the same day as the song's release.[98] The video shows Styles dancing shirtless at a bacchanal in a crowd of sweat-drenched people of all genders.[5] [62] [99] The dancers curtain themselves over him, "gently jostling and caressing each other" as he throws his head back in ecstasy.[10] [12] [62] The video switches betwixt scenes of Styles alone and with the dancers.[100] Some scenes show him riding on the dorsum of a motorcycle with outstretched arms, and standing solitary in a house.[five] [33] [35] Styles is also seen wading in the sea while bathed in red light and wearing a black, sequined blazer.[101] Afterward in the video, he stares at his ain reflection while being hung upside downwards.[12] The video ends with an meet between Styles and some police force officers.[35] The visual mostly takes place in darkness with occasional uses of neon cherry-red, pastel pinkish, and blue filters.[x] [27]

The video suggests people "having sexual activity and feeling sad", which is how Styles described the album to Rolling Stone.[33] [102] Alonso noted swift transitions between every scene in the music video which has Styles equally the central point of every location change.[35] Georgia Slater of People said the visual portrays a more than emotional side of Styles,[101] with Dylan Kelly from V calling Styles'southward "authentically carefree identity" in the video "a celebration of [his] personal journeying of cocky-discovery".[100] W 's Jocelyn Silverish described the visual as "a steamy, moody, Ryan McGinley-esque work".[37] Rolling Rock's Claire Shaffer placed the video on her list of the best music videos of 2019.[96]

Credits and personnel [edit]

Credits are adapted from the liner notes of Fine Line.[14]

Recording [edit]

  • Recorded at The Cave Studio (Nashville, Tennessee), EastWest Studios (Los Angeles, California), and Henson Recording Studios (Hollywood, California)
  • Mixed at The Gift Shop (Los Angeles, California)
  • Mastered at Sterling Audio (Edgewater, New Bailiwick of jersey)

Personnel [edit]

  • Harry Styles  – vocals, songwriting, backing vocals
  • Tyler Johnson  – songwriting, production, bankroll vocals, drums, drum programming, bass, acoustic guitar, keyboards, engineering
  • Thomas Hull  – songwriting, electric guitar, additional production
  • Jason White  – choir, contractor
  • Brandon Winbush  – choir
  • Nikisha Daniel  – choir
  • Tiffany Smith  – choir
  • Tiffany Stevenson  – choir
  • Ivan Jackson  – horn
  • Jeremy Hatcher  – engineering
  • Nick Lobel  – engineering
  • Sammy Witte  – engineering
  • Matt Tuggle  – assistant engineering
  • Matt Wallick  – assistant engineering
  • Jon Castelli  – mixing
  • Ingmar Carlson  – mix assistant
  • Randy Merrill  – mastering

Charts [edit]

Certifications [edit]

Release history [edit]

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Release every bit a promotional single

References [edit]

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Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lights_Up

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