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Petals for Armor I
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| Petals for Armor I | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP by | ||||
| Released | February 6, 2020 | |||
| Recorded | 2019 | |||
| Studio |
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| Length | 18:07 | |||
| Label | Atlantic | |||
| Producer |
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| Hayley Williams chronology | ||||
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| Singles from Petals for Armor | ||||
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Petals for Armor I is the debut extended play (EP) by American singer-songwriter and Paramore frontwoman Hayley Williams. It was released on Atlantic Records on February 6, 2020, as the first in a planned series of releases in the Petals for Armor era.[1] Williams explained the inspiration behind its title is due to her belief that "the best way for me to protect myself is to be vulnerable."[2] The EP was produced by Williams' Paramore bandmate Taylor York and was written throughout 2019 during Paramore's hiatus after touring in support of their fifth studio album, After Laughter (2017).
The EP was supported by two singles; "Simmer" was released on January 22, 2020, and "Leave It Alone" on January 30. Each were accompanied with music videos which share a narrative.
Background
[edit]Following extensive touring in support of Paramore's fifth studio album After Laughter (2017), Hayley Williams expressed her feelings about the group's future moving forward explaining that they were not breaking up, however needed time away from writing and touring.[3][4] In an interview with BBC Radio, in January 2020, Williams explained her process behind developing Petals for Armor.[5]
"I'm so ready and so incredibly humbled to get to share this project... Making it was a scary, empowering experience. Some of my proudest moments as a lyricist happened while writing 'PETALS FOR ARMOR.' And I was able to get my hands a little dirtier than usual when it came to instrumentation. I'm in a band with my favorite musicians so I never really feel the need to step into a role as a player when it comes to Paramore records. This project, however, benefited from a little bit of musical naïveté and rawness and so I experimented quite a bit more. I made this with some of the closest people to me. Their respective talents really shine bright throughout the record. I like to think we all make each other better and the result is something that sounds and FEELS exactly as I'd hoped it would. Now that it's time to put it all out there, I can finally exhale. I'm excited to let people in to experience a different side of myself that I've only very recently become familiar with."
In an Apple Music interview with Zane Lowe, Williams expressed that "Petals for Armor" was "a project", with Lowe confirming the first EP, which was released on February 6, 2020.[1]
Singles
[edit]"Simmer" was released as the album's lead single on January 22, 2020, on Atlantic Records.[6] The single's music video, directed by Warren Fu, premiered on the same day.[7] "Simmer" had been continually teased on social media throughout January 2020, featuring visual and audio clips of the track and its video.[8]
"Leave It Alone" was released as the album's second single, along with its music video, on January 30, 2020.[9]
Track listing
[edit]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Simmer" |
| 4:26 |
| 2. | "Leave It Alone" |
| 4:05 |
| 3. | "Cinnamon" |
| 3:31 |
| 4. | "Creepin'" |
| 2:58 |
| 5. | "Sudden Desire" |
| 3:07 |
| Total length: | 18:07 | ||
Credits and personnel
[edit]Credits adapted from liner notes.[10]
|
Musicians
|
Additional personnel
|
Charts
[edit]| Chart (2020) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| US Top Current Albums (Billboard)[11] | 79 |
| US Heatseekers Albums (Billboard)[12] | 19 |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Hayley Williams - Hayley Williams and Zane Lowe "Petals for Armor I" Apple Music Interview". February 3, 2020 – via www.youtube.com.
- ^ "Hayley Williams explains meaning of Petals For Armor: "The way for me to protect myself best is to be vulnerable"". NME. January 22, 2020.
- ^ "Hayley Williams addresses Paramore's future in emotional interview". Alternative Press. March 20, 2019.
- ^ Greenwood, Koltan (January 23, 2020). "Paramore had to "get quiet for a minute" for Hayley Williams' exploration". Alternative Press.
- ^ "Hayley Williams' First Solo Single Is Here: Watch the Paramore Frontwoman's Horror Flick 'Simmer' Video". Billboard.
- ^ "Simmer - Single by Hayley Williams". Archived from the original on January 26, 2020. Retrieved February 3, 2020 – via music.apple.com.
- ^ "Paramore's Hayley Williams releases 'scary, empowering' first single 'Simmer' off debut solo album". EW.com.
- ^ "Hayley Williams Teases First Solo Single "Simmer"". Nylon. January 21, 2020.
- ^ "Hayley Williams Wants You To Leave Her Alone | V Magazine". vmagazine.com. January 31, 2020.
- ^ "Simmer" (single liner notes). Hayley Williams. Atlantic Records. 2020. Back cover.
{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link) - ^ "Hayley Williams Chart History". Billboard. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
- ^ "Hayley Williams Chart History (Heatseekers Albums)". Billboard. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
Petals for Armor I
View on GrokipediaBackground and development
Conception and inspiration
Following the release of Paramore's 2017 album After Laughter, Hayley Williams began exploring solo work as a means to address her personal experiences more intimately, separate from the band's collaborative dynamic.[6] In 2018, she grappled with severe depression and anxiety, compounded by her divorce from Chad Gilbert and long-term emotional traumas, which led her to seek therapy and engage in self-reflective practices.[6][7] During this period, Williams underwent therapy that encouraged her to confront embodied shame and generational pain.[6] Petals for Armor I, released as the inaugural EP in a planned trilogy, served as Williams' platform for examining emotional vulnerability, with the overarching project structured around elemental themes of fire, earth, and water to represent stages of personal growth.[6] The title "Petals for Armor" emerged from a craniosacral therapy session where floral imagery symbolized the delicate yet resilient nature of self-protection, evoking how vulnerability—likened to soft petals—could form a form of armor against inner turmoil.[7][8] This EP marked the initial phase of what would compile into her full solo album Petals for Armor.[6] Williams sought to diverge from Paramore's pop-punk roots toward a more introspective indie pop sound, incorporating art-pop elements to foster raw emotional expression.[6] She cited influences such as Björk's experimental vulnerability, which helped shape the EP's textured, confessional style.[6][8] The project was first teased in early 2020 through cryptic social media posts on Instagram and a dedicated account, featuring imagery of flowers, natural elements, and armor-like motifs alongside audio clips of heavy breathing to build anticipation for the EP's February 6 release.[9][10]Recording process
The recording of Petals for Armor I occurred primarily at Hayley Williams' home studio in Franklin, Tennessee, spanning late 2019 to early 2020.[11][12] This timeline allowed Williams to develop the five-track EP amid her personal introspection following Paramore's 2017 album After Laughter, transitioning from initial solo demos to collaborative refinement.[13] Central to the process were key collaborators from Williams' Paramore circle, including guitarist and producer Taylor York, who co-produced the EP and contributed guitar parts, and drummer Zac Farro, who performed on select tracks.[13][12] Williams herself took on lead vocals, keyboards, and aspects of engineering, fostering a close-knit dynamic that emphasized vulnerability.[11] Production decisions centered on blending ambient sounds, electronic textures, and live instrumentation to cultivate a raw, intimate aesthetic, drawing from influences like Radiohead while prioritizing emotional directness.[12][13] Sessions incorporated minimal vocal preparation to preserve unpolished authenticity, reflecting Williams' intent to capture genuine emotional states without overproduction.[11] The process faced logistical hurdles from the onset of COVID-19 restrictions in early 2020, prompting remote contributions for some elements and complicating in-person collaboration.[11] Williams stressed organic takes to embody the EP's themes of mental health resilience, navigating these constraints to maintain the project's introspective core.[12]Musical composition
Style and genre
Petals for Armor I represents a significant evolution in Hayley Williams' musical output, blending indie pop, alternative R&B, and dream pop genres with subtle electronic and folk influences. This marks a departure from the high-energy rock of her work with Paramore, shifting toward more subdued and atmospheric arrangements that prioritize introspection and emotional depth. Critics noted the EP's fusion of these styles, creating a cohesive yet eclectic sound that avoids the bombastic choruses of her band era in favor of layered, immersive textures.[14][15][16] The instrumentation underscores this atmospheric quality, featuring prominent synthesizers, reverb-heavy guitars, subtle percussion, and rich vocal harmonies. Tracks like "Simmer" exemplify the EP's slow-burn builds, incorporating glitchy electronic effects and eerie synth swells to heighten tension without relying on traditional rock drive. Guitars appear distant and atmospheric rather than foregrounded, while percussion remains understated, often syncopated or skittering to support the mood-driven flow. This setup contributes to a lo-fi aesthetic through minimal mixing, allowing raw vocal deliveries and ambient elements to breathe.[5][17][16] Structurally, the songs vary in length from around three to over four minutes, eschewing conventional verse-chorus forms in favor of non-linear progressions that emphasize evolving moods over catchy hooks. This approach fosters a sense of cohesion across the EP, with electronic pulses and folk-tinged acoustics weaving through the tracks to create an intimate, exploratory vibe. The sound draws echoes of Lorde’s introspective production and St. Vincent’s experimental edge, yet remains anchored in Williams' innate pop sensibility, blending vulnerability with accessible melodies.[18][19][15]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of Petals for Armor I center on Hayley Williams' battles with mental health, particularly depression rooted in childhood trauma and misplaced anger, as she processes isolation, shame, and the path to self-forgiveness through intensive therapy. Songs like "Simmer" confront emotional barriers of rage and vulnerability, with Williams reflecting on controlling anger and embracing femininity as protection. "Leave It Alone" addresses grief and the fear of loss, inspired by her grandmother's accident and her own recovery from depression. "Cinnamon" celebrates solitude and domestic comfort at home, while "Creepin'" uses a vampire metaphor for toxic relationships that drain energy. "Sudden Desire" explores unwanted lust and repressed feelings amid personal turmoil.[20][21][22][23][24][6] Recurring motifs of nature and protection underscore the EP's emotional core, with "petals" serving as fragile armor—symbolizing how vulnerability acts as a shield against pain, drawn from Williams' realization that "the way for me to protect myself best is to be vulnerable and be OK with having a lot of feelings." This imagery ties into broader themes of resilience, as the tracks collectively explore reclaiming personal agency after emotional isolation. The writing style is raw and confessional, favoring direct expressions of turmoil over elaborate metaphors to foster authentic introspection.[25][6][26] Williams' vocal delivery amplifies these themes, using whispers for intimate confessions, screams for rage-fueled release, and layered harmonies to evoke shifting emotional depths; in "Simmer," the escalating intensity mirrors inner turmoil and the struggle to express anger.[7] Unlike her Paramore lyrics, which often featured narrative arcs about relationships and collective empowerment, the EP's content is markedly autobiographical, prioritizing solitary reflection on trauma's aftermath—such as her parents' divorce and unhealthy patterns in her marriage—for deeper self-understanding and healing.[20]Release and promotion
Singles and announcement
On January 22, 2020, Hayley Williams announced her solo project Petals for Armor, coinciding with the release of the lead single "Simmer" from the forthcoming EP Petals for Armor I. The track was accompanied by a music video directed by Warren Fu, which depicts Williams engulfed in flames amid a dark, forested setting, symbolizing her inner rage and emotional turmoil.[27][28] The EP Petals for Armor I was formally unveiled and released on February 6, 2020, via Atlantic Records, comprising five tracks including the previously issued "Simmer" and "Leave It Alone" (the latter released as a single on January 30, 2020, with its own narrative video continuing the horror-tinged storyline). On the same day, "Cinnamon" was issued as the EP's second promotional single, featuring a music video directed by Warren Fu that portrays Williams in a dimly lit room surrounded by women in contemplative poses, underscoring themes of personal reflection and vulnerability.[2][29] Prior to the EP's launch, Williams built anticipation through social media teasers on the official Petals for Armor Instagram account, which posted cryptic visuals of floral motifs, close-up plant imagery, and audio clips hinting at the project's introspective nature. In accompanying interviews, Williams described the work as a therapeutic outlet, born from her experiences in therapy to confront depression, trauma, and self-growth.[9][6] The singles generated early buzz, with "Simmer" debuting at number 10 on Billboard's Alternative Digital Song Sales chart and peaking at number 7 on the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart, establishing the EP's reputation for raw, emotionally charged songwriting.[30]Marketing and commercial rollout
Petals for Armor I was released digitally on February 6, 2020, exclusively through Atlantic Records and made immediately available on major streaming platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music.[2][31] A limited edition 2LP vinyl was issued exclusively through Urban Outfitters at launch. Physical editions were also later included in bundled box sets with the subsequent EPs in the series for the full album, limited to 10,000 units worldwide.[32] The EP's promotion emphasized intimate, virtual engagement amid the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic, featuring Instagram Live sessions where Hayley Williams shared insights into the project's mental health themes and hosted informal listening experiences for fans.[33] These efforts aligned with Williams' broader advocacy, including tie-ins with the National Alliance on Mental Illness (NAMI), for which she served as a youth ambassador, using the rollout to raise awareness about depression and anxiety.[34] The single "Simmer," released earlier that year, helped build anticipation through its thematic connection to personal resilience. As the opening chapter in a trilogy of EPs, Petals for Armor I was strategically positioned to build toward the full Petals for Armor album, released on May 8, 2020, with cross-promotion sustained via weekly single drops that teased tracks from across the installments.[5] This serialized approach allowed for gradual fan immersion, culminating in the complete 15-track compilation. In a significant 2025 development, Williams extended her debut solo tour—originally scheduled for fall 2020 but canceled due to the COVID-19 pandemic—with additional dates announced on November 11, 2025, spanning U.S. cities from March to May 2026 and including live performances of tracks from Petals for Armor I as part of support for the overall project.[35][36]Reception
Critical reception
Petals for Armor I received widespread critical acclaim upon its release, with reviewers praising Hayley Williams' exploration of personal vulnerability and emotional complexity. The extended play, serving as the opening installment of her solo project, was lauded for showcasing Williams' expansive vocal range and raw emotional depth, particularly in confronting mental health struggles such as grief and self-doubt. Aggregated reviews for the broader Petals for Armor project, which incorporates the EP, earned a Metacritic score of 83/100 based on 22 critics, indicating "universal acclaim."[37] The Guardian described the work as "one of the year's biggest revelations," highlighting its bold fusion of introspection and sonic experimentation.[17] Critics particularly commended the EP's vulnerability in addressing mental health themes, with Williams drawing from therapy and personal loss to craft lyrics that balance rage and resilience. The innovative sound, blending pop structures with R&B-infused grooves and electronic elements, was noted for its freshness, diverging from her Paramore roots while retaining emotional immediacy. Pitchfork awarded 7.2/10, singling out "Simmer" as a standout for its "simmering intensity," where Williams' layered vocals convey barely contained anger and cathartic release.[5] The Nashville Scene echoed this, calling the EP "a glimpse into a private world" rich with emotional rainbows amid darkness, praising tracks like "Cinnamon" for their danceable funk and themes of acceptance.[38] The EP itself received praise in previews, with Consequence noting its "raw vulnerability" upon release.[39] While largely positive, some reviews pointed to minor flaws, such as an occasional over-reliance on atmospheric production that could overshadow memorable hooks. Rolling Stone, rating it 3.5/5, appreciated the vulnerability and experimental textures but suggested certain moments prioritized mood over catchiness, leading to uneven cohesion.[18] In 2025 retrospectives, the EP's enduring relevance has been reaffirmed amid discussions of Williams' solo evolution, with renewed interest in her solo career sparked by her announced first-ever solo tour. Outlets like Rolling Stone and NME have highlighted how the project continues to resonate in conversations about artistic independence and mental health advocacy for solo artists.[36][40]Commercial performance
Upon its release, Petals for Armor I contributed to the broader project's visibility, with the full album debuting with 22,000 equivalent album units in the United States, according to Nielsen Music/MRC Data, largely driven by streaming activity.[41] The EP peaked at number 79 on the US Top Current Albums chart (Billboard). Internationally, the full Petals for Armor album, incorporating the EP, reached No. 4 on the UK Albums Chart, No. 19 in Scotland, and top 50 positions in both Australia and Ireland.[42] The lead single "Simmer" accumulated over 50 million streams on Spotify by 2021, contributing significantly to the EP's visibility. By 2025, the full Petals for Armor album had surpassed 189 million streams on Spotify, with the EP's tracks contributing significantly, experiencing renewed surges tied to promotional activities.[43] Long-term, Petals for Armor I played a foundational role in the broader Petals for Armor project's success, though standalone physical sales for the EP remained modest amid a shift toward digital consumption.Track listing
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Simmer" | 4:26 |
| 2. | "Leave It Alone" | 4:05 |
| 3. | "Cinnamon" | 3:32 |
| 4. | "Creepin'" | 2:58 |
| 5. | "Sudden Desire" | 3:08 |
Credits and personnel
All tracks are written by Hayley Williams, except where noted.[44]Vocals
- Hayley Williams – lead vocals (all tracks)
Instrumentation
- Hayley Williams – keyboards (all tracks), guitar (tracks 1, 3, 4), drums (3)
- Joey Howard – bass guitar (all tracks), keyboards (1, 2, 4, 5), guitar (4), percussion (2)
- Aaron Steele – drums (all tracks), programming (1)
- Taylor York – additional instrumentation (all tracks)
- Steph Marziano – keyboards (4), programming (4)
- Mike Weiss – additional guitar (4)
Production
- Hayley Williams – production (all tracks)
- Taylor York – production (all tracks)
- Carlos de la Garza – mixing, engineering
- Dave Cooley – mastering
- Daniel James – additional production (4, 5)
- Steph Marziano – additional production (4)
- Maureen Kenny – A&R
- Irene Sourlis – A&R administration
