Body Paint (song)
"Body Paint" is a song by English indie rock band Arctic Monkeys released on 29 September 2022, through Domino Recording Company. The song was included as the second single on their seventh studio album The Car. Written by lead singer Alex Turner and produced by James Ford, "Body Paint" is a baroque pop, orchestral pop, and art rock track.
"Body Paint"
Music critics praised "Body Paint"'s production, instrumental arrangenment, and vocals. Comparing the song to works by The Beatles, Burt Bacharach, and David Bowie. The song has been nominated for Best Alternative Music Performance at the 66th Annual Grammy Awards. It debuted at number 22 on the UK Singles Chart.
The accompanying music video was directed by Brook Linder with Ben Chappell serving as creative director. The video features an editing room where a screen shows different scenes, interspersed with footage of the band playing in a film studio. Visually it is inspired by the works of Alan Pakula made in collaboration with director of photography, Gordon Willis. The video was shot on film, specifically on Ektachrome, as a requirement of Turner and Chappell. Arctic Monkeys performed the song on television shows such as The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, The Jonathan Ross Show, Later...with Jools Holland and Late Night Berlin.
Composition and lyrics[edit]
Musically the song has been described as a "lounge-y piano ballad", and Beatlesque,[6] with "gorgeous string arrangements" reminiscent of Burt Bacharach and George Martin's work with said group.[2] The band has been said as being "in introspective lounge lizard mode over sparkling piano and slowed-down drums."[7] Robin Murray of Clash, thought there was a "sense of Bowie's mid 70s peak in the arrangement", and that the song "Split in two by that guitar solo", finds the band, "moving in a sensual, yet utterly insular, path."[8] The second half of the song features "gritty guitars" that "push the song into a slightly more rocking direction."[9]
About the chorus, "Straight from the cover shoot / There's still a trace of body paint / On your legs and on your arms and on your face", lead singer Alex Turner said, "Not exactly what you'd imagine singing over the loud bit–But it's as much about the musical ideas as the lyrics".[10]
Music video[edit]
The song's music video was directed by Brook Linder with Ben Chappell serving as creative director. The video was filmed between London and Missouri, and features an editing room where a screen shows different scenes, such as a man looking at a helicopter, or a tanning booth, interspersed with footage of the band playing in a film studio.[11][12] Consequence noted that the video "Uses motifs of going around in circles and screens-within-screens to tease out the themes of the lyrics."[7] Director Brook Linder said about the video: "Is very much about visualizing the process of filmmaking and specifically the creation of symbolic imagery (and where that process can fall apart). There is a code to be deciphered and everything has a specific meaning, but mostly it’s the code-making itself that’s on display." Visually it is inspired by 1960s live television performances and the works of Alan Pakula made in collaboration with director of photography, Gordon Willis, specifically The Parallax View. The sequence that recreates a zoetrope, came to Linder in a dream.[13] The video was shot on film, which Linder thought "became absolutely necessary because it was inextricable from the concept of the piece itself." Although he noted the difficulty of shooting on Ektachrome, which was a requirement of Turner and Chappell, he was happy with the final result: "I was dead wrong, basically. It looks like the thing we’ve been chasing forever. They were right."[14] The cameras used were the ARRI 416 and the Canon Scoopic or Bolex for the vignettes.[13]