
Crazy Kids
"Crazy Kids" is a song by American singer Kesha. It was released on April 29, 2013, as the third and final single from her second album Warrior (2012), with will.i.am or Juicy J as the featured artist depending on the version. An additional remix surfaced online featuring Pitbull. The lyrics were written by Kesha with assistance with Dr. Luke, Benny Blanco, Cirkut, who also helmed production of the track. Each featured artist wrote their own contribution.
"Crazy Kids"
April 29, 2013
June 2012
3:49
- Dr. Luke
- Cirkut
- Benny Blanco
Featuring whistling, the song is of the synthpop and hip hop genres. A music video for the track premiered on MTV on May 28, 2013, followed by the finale of her television documentary, Kesha: My Crazy Beautiful Life. The song was met with mixed reviews upon release, with will.i.am's addition to the song being criticized, while positive reactions for the music video followed, accompanied by comparisons between her Riff Raff and Brooke Candy.
Worldwide, the song has reached moderate success. The record peaked at 27 in the UK Singles Chart.[1] In the United States, the song entered Billboard Hot 100 at number 59 and peaked at number 40 and entered the Mainstream Top 40 at number 22, eventually peaking at number 19. The record reached 14 in the charts in both Ireland and Lebanon. "Crazy Kids" is also certified Platinum in the US and Australia.
Composition[edit]
"Crazy Kids" combines the genres technopop,[9] rap,[10] and hip hop[9] into what VIBE called "hip-pop".[11] Lyrically, "Crazy Kids" was said to establish dualistic personalities for Kesha. The A.V. Club writer Annie Zaleski said: "On the acoustic guitar-driven choruses, she's sweet and melancholy as she reveals her insanity; on the electronic-dipped verses, she unloads snappy hip-hop boasts ("I'm no virgin or no Virgo / I'm crazy that's my word, though") to assert herself."[9][12] Over hip hop dub beats, Kesha raps "coochie" with "Gucci", drops several f-bombs, and contributes her famous sing-rap style vocals in addition to traditional singing.[10] The song prominently features whistling in several areas.[12][13]
"Crazy Kids" is composed in the key of G minor at a tempo of 128 beats per minute.
Critical reception[edit]
The song received mixed reviews from critics. The Huffington Post stated that: "in addition to sporting pastel cornrows, [Kesha] wore an outfit that could only be described as ...interesting... her light ink corset under a plaid shirt, [along with] denim hot [daisy dukes] paired with white thigh-high stockings evokes a Christina Aguilera in her 'Your Body'" video, meets James Franco in 'Spring Breakers' vibe".[17] About the video, the rapper tweeted the following: "Just wait until you see what these super sweet biker dudes are doing in my video".[18] PopCrush blogged about the video, saying: "clearly, Kesha, who is quite pretty, is going for the dork look, like Katy Perry did in her 'Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.)' video. But instead of a headgear-and-braces-wearing nerd, she's more of a gangsta geek".[19] Calling the video "an invitation to a lazy-Sunday house party", Canada's MuchMusic wrote that Kesha's "ghetto fabulous" hair and the Hells Angels bikers make the video complete, and that they "loved it".[14] MTV called Kesha's look "eye-popping couture", suggesting the sunglasses as being inspired by Elton John and the braids by fellow rappers Riff Raff[20] and Brooke Candy.[16] Fashion writer Mickey Woods of Glamour affirmed the Brooke Candy comparison.[21] New York magazine' music blog, Vulture, documented a high volume of occult symbolism, specifically that which is conventionally associated with modern perceptions of the Bavarian Illuminati.[22] Amanda Dobbins, the reviewer, toyed with the possibility of Kesha being a whistleblower for the cult, displaying the symbols such as the all-seeing eye tattooed on the rapper's palm, both overtly and excessively in the "Crazy Kids" video.[22] Dobbins wrote: "She keeps waving it around, too, just to make sure that you see it and get mildly anxious about her Illuminati associations." Conversely, Dobbins suggested Kesha is serving consumers the Illuminati angle to snag more views,[22] as Billboard and other mainstream music critics reported with the music video for "Die Young".[23][24][25][26] MTV reported a similar position, noticing a trend with the singer and ocular-themed accessories, namely nail art.[27] Paper blogger Abby Schreiber said: "Never one for subtlety, Ke$ha rocks...an Illuminati tattoo on her hand...."[28]
During their critique of Warrior, Billboard said 'Crazy Kids' displayed Kesha at "her most take-it-or-leave it" and called the beats "grimy".[10] Considering her vocals on "Crazy Kids" as some of the singer's best, Billboard called the chorus a "sing-a-long".[10] Critics compared the track to "Like a G6" by the Far East Movement.[13]
Critics unfavorably reviewed will.i.am's addition to the song. Spin's Mark Hogan said will.i.am's verse delivers "cheap crassness," but praised Kesha's solo version, stating that her "charisma is enough for you to keep from flipping the dial."[29] Hogan also added that while "Crazy Kids" was inferior to will's Britney Spears' collaboration, "Scream & Shout", the song was destined for mainstream top 40 success.[29]
The Honesty Hour ran an article stating that the original was "fine" without the additional verse, but that will.i.am can "only help the song" commercially.[30]
Chart and commercial performance[edit]
"Crazy Kids" debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at 59, and rose to a peak of 40, becoming her consecutive second solo single not to reach the top ten.[31] It also peaked at 19 on the Mainstream Top 40 chart, also becoming her second solo single not to reach the top ten on those charts.[32] On December 13, 2018, "Crazy Kids" received a platinum certification in the United States by the nation's Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) for accomplishing combined sales and streaming equivalent units of 1 million in the country.[33]
In the UK, "Crazy Kids" peaked at 27.[1] In Australia the song peaked at 32 on the ARIA charts, obtaining a gold certification with digital sales of over 35,000 units.[34]
Credits adapted from the liner notes on BMI.