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New Shapes
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| "New Shapes" | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single by Charli XCX featuring Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek | ||||
| from the album Crash | ||||
| Released | 4 November 2021 | |||
| Genre | ||||
| Length | 3:20 | |||
| Label | ||||
| Songwriters | ||||
| Producers |
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| Charli XCX singles chronology | ||||
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| Christine and the Queens singles chronology | ||||
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| Caroline Polachek singles chronology | ||||
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| Music video | ||||
| "New Shapes" on YouTube | ||||
"New Shapes" is a song by British singer Charli XCX, featuring French singer Christine and the Queens and American singer Caroline Polachek. It was released on 4 November 2021 as the second single from XCX's fifth studio album, Crash (2022). The song has been described as an '80s-inspired synth-pop, indie pop, and electro-funk track.[1][2][3][4]
Background
[edit]
"New Shapes" was written by Charli XCX, Christine and the Queens, Caroline Polachek, Noonie Bao, Linus Wiklund and Deaton Chris Anthony, and the latter two also handled the production duties. It marks the second collaborative effort between both XCX and Christine, and XCX and Polachek. The former pairing made the 2019 single "Gone", while the latter created the track "Tears" from the 2017 mixtape Pop 2. Christine and Polachek, meanwhile, had previously worked together on the song "La vita nuova" in 2020. The single was described as '80s-influenced[5] and "synth-heavy", with lyrics "lamenting (...) inability to truly let (...) significant others in, instead pushing them away, rejecting true love and embracing freedom".[6] The track was released on 4 November 2021, with Charli XCX simultaneously announcing the title and cover of her album Crash, as well as the 2022 concert tour.[7][6] The song was also previously teased during a live performance earlier in 2021, alongside another unreleased track.
Music video
[edit]The music video for the song was directed by Imogene Strauss, Luke Orlando, and Terrence O'Connor, and was released on 12 November 2021.[8] It begins with Charli XCX, Caroline Polachek and Christine and the Queens participating in an imaginary TV Heaven chat show, hosted by Benito Skinner, before teaming up to perform the song on stage. The video parodies sexist, late-night talk show hosts.[9]
Critical reception
[edit]Pitchfork's Vrinda Jagota described the song in a positive review as having "towering swells of '80s production", stating that it "combines the euphoria of a Patrick Swayze dance number with the crushing depth of a Fleabag monologue: a celebration of a love too radioactive to last."[5] Clash's Ana Lamond said that the song "takes an alternative route to empowerment, with a laser focused hook [...] seeing the hyper-pop connoisseurs rise above the manipulative relationships they find themselves haunted by."[10]
Track listing
[edit]Digital download and streaming[11]
- "New Shapes" – 3:20
Streaming – bonus tracks[12]
- "New Shapes" – 3:20
- "Good Ones" – 2:16
Charts
[edit]| Chart (2021) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Ireland (IRMA)[13] | 90 |
| New Zealand Hot Singles (RMNZ)[14] | 39 |
Release history
[edit]| Region | Date | Format | Label | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Various | 4 November 2021 | [11] |
References
[edit]- ^ Cills, Hazel (4 November 2021). "Charli XCX (feat. Caroline Polachek & Christine and the Queens), 'New Shapes'". NPR. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ Curto, Justin (4 November 2021). "It's Charli (and Chris) (and Caroline), Baby, on 'ຖēຟ ŞhคpēŞ'". Vulture. Retrieved 26 November 2021.
- ^ Bennett, Eric (18 March 2022). "Charli XCX Follows Her Pop Passion on the Uneven CRASH". Paste. Retrieved 18 March 2022.
- ^ Green, Thomas H. (19 March 2022). "Album: Charli XCX - Crash". The Arts Desk. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
- ^ a b Vrinda Jagota (4 November 2021). ""New Shapes" [ft. Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek] by Charli XCX Review". Pitchfork. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ a b Starr Bowenbank (4 November 2021). "Charli XCX Announces New Album & Tour, Drops 'New Shapes' With Caroline Polachek & Christine and the Queens". Billboard. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ George Griffiths (4 November 2021). "Charli XCX announces new album Crash, due March 2022 and drops single New Shapes". officialcharts.com. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ Jordan Darville (12 November 2021). "Charli XCX shares video for "New Shapes" featuring Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek". The Fader. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ Lygeia Gomes (16 November 2021). "'New Shapes' by Charli XCX". officialcharts.com. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ Lamond, Ana (15 April 2022). "Charli XCX: Her 17 Best Songs". Clash Magazine. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
- ^ a b "Charli XCX - New Shapes (feat. Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek)". 4 November 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2021 – via Deezer.
- ^ "New Shapes (feat. Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek)". Retrieved 22 November 2021 – via Spotify.
- ^ "Discography Charli XCX". irish-charts.com. Retrieved 22 November 2021.
- ^ "NZ Hot Singles Chart". Recorded Music NZ. 15 November 2021. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
New Shapes
View on GrokipediaProduction and Development
Conception and Recording
"New Shapes" originated during sessions for Charli XCX's fifth studio album, Crash, with songwriting credits attributed to Charli XCX (Charlotte Aitchison), Caroline Polachek, Christine and the Queens (Héloïse Letissier), Noonie Bao (Jonnli Parmenius), Deaton Chris Anthony, and Linus Wiklund (of Lotus IV).[6] The track's conception drew from ongoing conversations among Charli XCX, Polachek, and Letissier about romantic relationships, a recurring theme in their personal and artistic exchanges via direct messages and podcasts.[7] Each artist penned a distinct verse to encapsulate their individual approaches to love, as Charli XCX explained: "I think we all fall in love quite differently."[7] Production was handled by Deaton Chris Anthony and Lotus IV, emphasizing synth-driven elements inspired by 1980s pop while integrating the vocal contributions of the three performers.[6] Specific recording locations and timelines for the initial tracking remain undocumented in primary accounts, though the collaboration leveraged the artists' established rapport—Polachek described Charli XCX as "the queen of features" for her adeptness at such partnerships.[7] The mixing phase, conducted by Geoff Swan at The Nest studio in the New Forest, United Kingdom, prioritized vocal separation and dynamic buildup, particularly in the final chorus, using outboard gear like Black Lion Audio Bluey 1176 compressors and Valhalla VintageVerb for spatial effects.[6] Swan noted that his approach involved minimal deviation from the production mix, instead amplifying existing elements for bolder impact: "Mostly it was a matter of making certain elements in the production sound bolder."[6]Collaborative Elements
"New Shapes" features vocals from French singer-songwriter Héloïse Letissier, performing as Christine and the Queens, and American singer Caroline Polachek, both of whom co-wrote the track alongside Charli XCX.[1][8] The collaboration extended to lyrical contributions, with each artist providing verses framed as personal poems on romantic relationships, drawn from prior discussions in direct messages and industry panels.[7][9] The song's writing credits also include producers Deaton Chris Anthony and Lotus IV, as well as Swedish songwriter Noonie Bao and producer Linus Wiklund, reflecting a multi-stage composition process that began in a January 2020 studio session between Charli XCX and Anthony.[1][8] Anthony, known for work with artists like Doja Cat and Tinashe, handled primary production duties, incorporating '80s-inspired synth elements, while Lotus IV contributed additional production.[1][4] This team-oriented approach aligned with Charli XCX's broader production strategy for her fifth album Crash, emphasizing pop maximalism through layered inputs from established collaborators.[10]Composition and Lyrics
Musical Style and Structure
"New Shapes" is a synth-pop track heavily influenced by 1980s pop aesthetics, featuring bubbly synthesizers, 808 beats, and a snare drum pattern akin to Fine Young Cannibals' "She Drives Me Crazy," creating a glossy, danceable sound with undertones of melancholy.[4][11] The song draws from freestyle and mall-pop styles of the era, evident in its euphoric yet introspective vibe, blending high-energy production with emotional depth through layered, traded vocals among Charli XCX, Christine and the Queens, and Caroline Polachek.[4][5] Structurally, the song adheres to a pop framework lasting 3 minutes and 20 seconds, composed in C major at 107 beats per minute with a 4/4 time signature, ensuring high danceability and energy.[12] It opens with an instrumental intro of synth motifs, followed by Verse 1 led by Charli XCX, a pre-chorus buildup, and the main chorus hook proclaiming the potential for love "in new shapes." Subsequent verses feature Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek, respectively, maintaining harmonic progression through chords such as Em, F, G, and Am, before a bridge delivers a vocal climax and resolution into the final chorus and fade-out.[13][1] Instrumentation prioritizes synthesizers for a retro-futuristic texture, augmented by programmed drums and multi-tracked vocals processed for clarity and punch, as detailed in mixing analyses emphasizing compression and spatial effects to enhance the track's immersive pop sheen.[6] This arrangement supports the song's thematic exploration of relational reinvention while prioritizing rhythmic drive and melodic catchiness.[5]Thematic Content
The lyrics of "New Shapes" center on the tensions inherent in romantic commitments, particularly the narrator's resistance to monogamous expectations and conventional intimacy. Charli XCX has described the track as reflecting her broader examination of "my relationship with relationships and sex and power," while specifying that it captures an inability to fully invest in one partnership: "I can't give my all in a relationship."[14] This is evident in verses where the singer admits a "tendency to run away" and expresses desires that defy traditional norms, such as "I want multiple partners / I want somebody else / I want no convention within sex and love."[1] These lines articulate a push for polyamory or fluid relational structures, positioning the song as a candid rejection of relational conformity in favor of personal autonomy. The refrain's invocation of "falling in love in new shapes" serves as a metaphor for experimental adaptations within a deteriorating bond, where partners contort their behaviors—shifting emotional postures or sexual dynamics—in futile bids for renewal. Critics have interpreted this as emblematic of a failing relationship's desperation, with the "new shapes" representing superficial reinventions that mask deeper incompatibilities, such as mismatched libidos or power asymmetries.[5] Guest vocalists Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek amplify this through layered harmonies that evoke collective female solidarity amid relational strife, akin to friends consoling one another over irreconcilable differences in love.[15] Underlying these explorations is a theme of transformative yet challenging personal growth, where love's fluidity promises liberation but invites conflict with societal or partner-imposed standards. The song avoids prescriptive resolutions, instead highlighting causal frictions: the narrator's innate aversion to exclusivity precipitates relational breakdown, underscoring how individual predispositions toward non-traditional arrangements can undermine conventional pairings.[16] This aligns with XCX's stated intent to probe power dynamics without romanticizing dysfunction, presenting relational experimentation as both empowering and destabilizing.[14]Release and Promotion
Single Release
"New Shapes" was released as the second single from Charli XCX's fifth studio album Crash on November 4, 2021.[2] The track, featuring vocals from Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek, was issued by Atlantic Records.[17] Its release coincided with the announcement of Crash, scheduled for March 18, 2022, and an accompanying tour.[3] The single followed "Good Ones," which had been released in September 2021, and served to build anticipation for the album's pop-oriented direction.[2] Digital formats, including streaming on platforms like Spotify and Apple Music, were the primary distribution method, with no physical single editions reported.[17] Commercially, "New Shapes" achieved modest chart performance, peaking at number 100 on the UK Sales Chart and number nine on the New Zealand Hot Singles Chart, reflecting limited mainstream radio airplay despite playlist inclusions.[18]Music Video
The music video for "New Shapes" was directed by Imogene Strauss, Luke Orlando, and Terrence O'Connor, and released on November 12, 2021.[19] It features Charli XCX alongside Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek, produced by West of 20.[19] The video presents the first performance segment from Charli XCX's fictional talk show TV Heaven, framed as viewable only "in the afterlife" to tie into promotional themes for her album Crash.[20] Comedian Benito Skinner appears as the host, satirizing sexist late-night television tropes by introducing the artists collectively as "ladies."[20] The trio then performs the track in a stylized studio setting with sunset-colored lighting and abstract geometric shapes, blending choreographed dance sequences with the show's narrative parody.[20] This conceptual approach emphasizes vibrant, energetic visuals that align with the song's 1980s-inspired pop aesthetic and themes of female solidarity.[20] The video has garnered a 7.4/10 user rating on IMDb based on 33 votes.[21]
Marketing and Performances
The release of "New Shapes" on November 4, 2021, served as a key promotional vehicle for Charli XCX's fifth studio album Crash, announced concurrently with a release date of March 18, 2022.[2] The single's rollout included the unveiling of 37 tour dates for the Crash Tour across North America and Europe, beginning March 26, 2022, in Oakland, California, positioning the track as a centerpiece of the album's marketing campaign.[3] Charli XCX amplified promotion through social media, quipping that non-streamers or non-attendees of the tour would face her personally enforcing listens, underscoring a playful yet direct engagement strategy.[3] A scheduled live television debut on Saturday Night Live on December 18, 2021, featuring Charli XCX alongside collaborators Caroline Polachek and Christine and the Queens, was canceled following positive COVID-19 tests among the show's cast and crew.[22] Live performances of "New Shapes" prominently featured during the Crash Tour, with guest appearances enhancing select shows. On May 19, 2022, at London's Alexandra Palace, Polachek joined Charli XCX onstage for the track.[23] Similarly, a Paris performance at Le Trianon included Christine and the Queens.[24] The song was also performed in a metaverse concert on June 22, 2022, streamed via platforms like Bandsintown, incorporating virtual elements into the tour's extended reach.[25]Reception
Critical Reviews
Pitchfork characterized "New Shapes" as futuristic avant-garde pop that evokes heartache through towering '80s-inspired swells of snare, synth, and wailed vocals, with the three artists' perspectives—Charli XCX grappling with flightiness, Christine and the Queens offering abstract imagery, and Caroline Polachek expressing regret—complementing each other to blend euphoric dance energy with confessional depth.[5] The review highlighted the track's portrayal of futile attempts to reshape oneself in a failing relationship, likening it to a "Patrick Swayze dance number" fused with a "Fleabag monologue."[5] In a student publication review, the song was praised for its bold exploration of female solidarity amid manipulative dynamics, with upbeat synths and mechanical drums evoking an '80s montage suitable for moving on confidently, though noted as less experimental than prior work.[15] The Harvard Crimson review emphasized its empowering, danceable tempo that maintains consistency, allowing listeners to appear "hot and unbothered" despite lyrical tensions.[15] A track review from college radio station WKNC found the vocals strong, particularly Charli XCX's performance and Christine and the Queens' verse, supported by minimal synths that spotlight the singers, but critiqued the extended chorus as weak, the central "new shapes" metaphor as vague, Polachek's feature as awkward amid receding instrumentation, and the overall lack of inventive edge compared to recent albums.[26] It assessed the single as "fine, good even" but a stylistic shift toward '80s pop that falls short of prior hyperpop standards.[26] Other outlets described it as a sugary '80s-indebted synth-pop track with echoing verses and punchy chords typical of the artists' styles, positioning it as a traditional Charli XCX outing distinct from radio-aimed predecessors like "Good Ones."[27][28] Aggregate user sentiment on platforms like Album of the Year rated it highly at 77/100 based on over 300 evaluations, often citing dream-pop production reminiscent of Charli's 2017 mixtape Pop 2.[29]Commercial Performance
"New Shapes" achieved modest commercial performance upon its release as the second single from Charli XCX's album Crash. In the United Kingdom, the track peaked at number 100 on the UK Singles Sales Chart and spent one week on the listing.[30] It failed to enter the main UK Singles Chart or other major territory charts, including the US Billboard Hot 100.[31] The song also reached number 90 on the New Zealand Hot Singles Chart. Streaming metrics reflect limited mainstream traction, with the track accumulating approximately 36 million plays on Spotify as of late 2024. YouTube views for the official music video stand at around 3.9 million.[32] No certifications have been awarded by bodies such as the RIAA or BPI, underscoring its underwhelming sales relative to the album's chart-topping success in the UK.[33]Fan and Cultural Reactions
Fans of Charli XCX expressed mixed reactions to "New Shapes" upon its release on November 4, 2021, with online discussions highlighting both appreciation for its collaborative elements and criticism of its perceived lack of innovation. In the r/popheads subreddit thread dedicated to the track, users praised Caroline Polachek's verse as a standout, with comments such as "Caroline ATEEEE per usual" receiving significant upvotes, alongside acclaim for the song's synth production and 80s-inspired montage-like vibe.[34] However, detractors labeled the track "generic synthpop" and "boring," expressing broader disappointment with the Crash era's direction toward conventional pop structures over experimental hyperpop.[34] The song's brevity, clocking in under three minutes, drew particular ire from some fans who decried the trend of shortened tracks in contemporary pop, arguing it limited depth despite the strong features from Christine and the Queens and Polachek.[34] Reaction videos on YouTube, including live responses from music commentators, reflected this divide, with some celebrating the "icons" collaboration while others found it underwhelming compared to XCX's prior work like the Pop 2 mixtape.[35] [36] Overall, fan sentiment leaned toward cautious optimism for the album's potential but underscored a preference for XCX's edgier, less commercial output. Culturally, "New Shapes" resonated in niche music circles for its exploration of fleeting relationships and female solidarity, with outlets describing it as an "empowering" anthem amid toxic dynamics, though it did not spawn widespread memes or viral trends beyond sporadic TikTok uses in dance edits and lyric clips.[15] [37] Its 80s pop revival elements positioned it within XCX's broader push against mainstream stagnation, but reception remained confined to pop enthusiasts rather than broader societal discourse, lacking the meme-driven ubiquity of tracks like "Boom Clap."[4] The collaboration amplified discussions on artist networks in indie-pop, yet fan analyses often framed it as a pivot toward accessibility that alienated core hyperpop adherents.[5]Track Listing and Credits
Formats and Listings
"New Shapes" was released exclusively in digital formats on November 4, 2021, by Asylum Records as the second single from Charli XCX's album Crash.[38] The single was distributed as downloadable files in MP3 (variable bitrate) and FLAC formats.[39][40] It became available for streaming on platforms including Spotify shortly after release.[41] The track listing for the digital single comprises a sole entry:- "New Shapes" (featuring Christine and the Queens and Caroline Polachek) – 3:20[38]
