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Lotus Flower (song)

"Lotus Flower" is a song by the English rock band Radiohead, released as the lead single from their eighth studio album, The King of Limbs (2011). It features Thom Yorke's falsetto over syncopated beats and a synthesiser bassline. Its music video, featuring Yorke's erratic dancing, attracted millions of views and inspired an internet meme.

Though it was not released as a commercial single, "Lotus Flower" entered charts including the UK singles chart, the US Alternative Songs chart, and the Billboard Japan Hot 100. It received positive reviews and was nominated for Best Rock Performance, Best Rock Song and Best Music Video at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards.

Background

The Radiohead singer, Thom Yorke, debuted a solo version of "Lotus Flower" at the Echoplex in Los Angeles on 2 October 2009, while on tour with his band Atoms for Peace. On 24 January 2010, Radiohead suspended work on their album The King of Limbs to perform at the Music Box Theater, Hollywood, to raise funds for Oxfam responding to the 2010 Haiti earthquake. At the show, Yorke performed "Lotus Flower" alone on acoustic guitar. The show was released free online in December 2010 as Radiohead for Haiti.

Composition

"Lotus Flower" has a more traditional structure than other songs on The King of Limbs. According to Luke Lewis of NME, it combines the electronic instrumentation of Radiohead's album Kid A (2000) with the "sonic warmth" of their album In Rainbows (2007). It features Yorke's "Prince-like" falsetto over syncopated beats and a "propulsive" synthesiser bassline. Though the song is in common time, the handclaps are in quintuple meter, creating a metric dissonance.

Lewis described "Lotus Flower" as "soulful and funky". In Rolling Stone, Jon Dolan likened it to an "icy" version of the funk musician James Brown, and said it "set the tone for Radiohead's funkiest record". Lewis speculated that the lyrics are about transcendence, self-effacement and "the magic of losing yourself in music and the senses".

Release

"Lotus Flower" was released as the lead single from Radiohead's eighth studio album, The King of Limbs, in 2011. Pitchfork wrote that it was selected "presumably for having a chorus and not being a ballad". Though it was not released as a commercial single, it entered charts including the UK singles chart, the US Alternative Songs chart and the Billboard Japan Hot 100. Remixes of "Lotus Flower" by various artists were released later in 2011 and compiled on the album TKOL RMX 1234567. A performance of "Lotus Flower" was included in the 2011 live video '.

Music video

Radiohead released a music video for "Lotus Flower" on their YouTube channel on February 18, 2011. It was directed by Garth Jennings and choreographed by Wayne McGregor, and features black-and-white footage of Yorke dancing erratically. Yorke said:

By 2013, the video had been viewed over 20 million times. It sparked the "Dancing Thom Yorke" internet meme, whereby people replaced the video's audio or edited the visuals, and led to the hashtag "#thomdance" trending on Twitter. Yorke said about the response: "It's a massive kick. That's what everybody wants. If it's something you've worked at and it goes over the edge like that then that's great."

IndieWire wrote that Jennings had turned Yorke's "spastic" dancing into art that it was "bizarrely compelling ... with Yorke's flailing, curiously spellbinding limbs as the main attraction". Metro praised Yorke's performance, writing that "somehow, even though he seems to be a mass of tangled limbs in the grip of an attack of some sort, it works", but criticised the video set as "sparse to say the least". The video was nominated for Best Music Video at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards.

Reception

Billboard and The New York Times praised "Lotus Flower" as the best track on The King of Limbs. The A.V. Club described it as "a sensually slinky come-on that's one remix away from being a dance-floor favourite". The Independent said it was "not exactly a singalong anthem" but "just blank and cryptic enough to sustain various interpretations". NME called it "subtle but powerful", and the Austin Chronicle called it "a commanding piece of modern electro-pop". It was nominated for Best Rock Performance and Best Rock Song at the 54th Annual Grammy Awards.

Chart performance

Notes