DoYaThing
DoYaThing is a collaborative single by the British virtual band Gorillaz, featuring American musician James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem and rapper André 3000 of OutKast, released on February 23, 2012, as part of footwear brand Converse's "Three Artists. One Song" promotional project.[1][2] The track, which blends alternative rock, funk, and hip-hop elements, originated from a spontaneous three-day recording session in fall 2011 at Gorillaz co-creator Damon Albarn's London studio, where Albarn provided an initial loop on new synthesizers, Murphy contributed production and instrumentation, and André 3000 delivered ad-libbed freestyle vocals in a single take.[2][1] The full-length version of DoYaThing runs approximately 13 minutes and includes explicit content with extended jamming and live elements, while a radio edit shortened to about 4.5 minutes was also produced for broader release.[3] It was made available as a free digital download via Converse's website and later on platforms like SoundCloud, alongside a limited-edition 10-inch single-sided vinyl pressed for Record Store Day in 2012 on the Parlophone label.[2][3] The song accompanied a Gorillaz-designed Converse Chuck Taylor sneaker collection, with the animated music video—featuring the band's cartoon characters in a surreal narrative—premiering on Converse's site on February 29, 2012, and directed by Jamie Hewlett and Passion Pictures.[2]Background
Conception
In 2011, Converse commissioned "DoYaThing" as part of their "Three Artists. One Song" project, an initiative designed to pair musicians from varied genres to co-create an original track.[4] This collaboration was specifically linked to the launch of a limited-edition Chuck Taylor All Star footwear collection, featuring custom designs by Gorillaz co-creator Jamie Hewlett that incorporated the band's animated characters.[5] The selected artists were Damon Albarn, representing Gorillaz, James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, and André 3000 of OutKast, chosen for their complementary yet distinct styles in electronic, alternative, and hip-hop music.[1] Initial planning occurred in late 2011, with the explicit aim of generating the song through unscripted improvisation to foster creative spontaneity.[6] As Murphy later described the preparatory approach, "We didn't exchange any ideas at all [beforehand]," highlighting Albarn's directive to simply convene and collaborate in the moment.[1] Within Gorillaz's framework as a virtual band known for virtual personas and frequent guest features, "DoYaThing" emerged as a standalone non-album single, embodying the project's emphasis on experimental partnerships outside traditional album cycles.[7]Recording process
The recording sessions for "DoYaThing" took place over three days at Damon Albarn's Studio 13 in London, as part of a commission from Converse for their Three Artists. One Song project.[2][8] The track adopted a highly improvisational approach, beginning with a basic drum beat and guitar riff before evolving spontaneously through the contributions of the artists. Albarn handled guitar and vocals, while James Murphy contributed on bass and synths, shaping the song's raw structure during the sessions. The extended jam section emerged on the spot, particularly on the final day. André 3000 contributed his rap vocals remotely from Atlanta in a single take, ad-libbing extensively and incorporating elements like piano and the improvised phrase "I'm the shit," which added to the track's unscripted energy.[2][1] Following the sessions, the full improvisation—including the integration of André 3000's remote vocals—was edited down to create a 4:26 radio edit for release, preserving the core elements while condensing the sprawling jam into a more concise form. Albarn noted that the longer version represented the "insane progression" of their time together, highlighting the unpolished, live feel of the recording.[2]Composition and lyrics
Musical structure
"DoYaThing" blends elements of alternative rock, hip hop, and krautrock, creating a hybrid sound that shifts from structured verses to experimental improvisation.[3] The track maintains a brisk tempo of 158 beats per minute, driving its energetic progression. Instrumentation centers on Damon Albarn's prominent guitar riffs, which provide a raw, riff-driven foundation, complemented by James Murphy's bass lines and synthesizer contributions that add pulsating, electronic layers.[8] Electronic programming, including drum machine patterns, underpins the rhythm, evoking a live, organic feel despite the synthetic elements.[2] The full-length version, clocking in at 13:09, follows a verse-chorus structure in its initial phases, with verses delivered in a rap style—Albarn handling the opening and André 3000 taking subsequent turns—interspersed with Murphy's chanted chorus hooks. This builds tension through repetitive motifs before transitioning into a climactic, approximately seven-minute improvisational jam featuring noisy, krautrock-inspired freakouts and extended vocal ad-libs from André 3000.[9] The jam, recorded live in a spontaneous session on the final day of production, emphasizes free-form exploration over scripted arrangement.[2] In contrast, the radio edit version, shortened to 4:26, preserves the core verse-chorus framework and infectious hook for commercial accessibility but omits the extended jam and outro, resulting in a more concise, pop-oriented form that highlights the collaborative vocal interplay without the full exploratory depth.[9]Lyrics and themes
The lyrics of "DoYaThing" were written collaboratively by Damon Albarn (performing as the Gorillaz character 2-D), James Murphy, and André 3000, with Albarn and Murphy delivering melodic verses and choruses while André 3000 contributes rapid-fire rap sections.[10][2] The song's structure alternates between these elements, beginning with 2-D's introspective opening verse, transitioning to Murphy's chorus, and building to André 3000's extended rap in the full version, which includes spontaneous ad-libs during the jam section.[10][11] Central themes revolve around imitation and inauthenticity, as seen in 2-D's lines like "I'm a pale imitator of a boy in the sky" and André 3000's refrain critiquing fakes with "You ain’t fresh squeezed juice, nigga you that Tang," evoking a sense of superficial replication in modern life.[10][12] Urban disconnection emerges through imagery of isolation and transience, such as "I'm the light in the mall when the power is gone / A shadow in the corner, just playing along," portraying a detached existence amid consumer spaces.[10] Playful absurdity permeates André 3000's verses, featuring nonsensical wordplay like "New word - onomatopoeia (Boom)" and "Generation X on bloopty bloop," blending humor with rapid scatting to undercut the song's underlying melancholy.[13][14] These motifs tie into Gorillaz's fictional universe as a virtual band, emphasizing themes of virtual identity through 2-D's self-description as an ethereal, imitative figure, which mirrors the project's animated, constructed personas created by Albarn and Jamie Hewlett.[10][15] Subtle nods to consumerism appear in the context of the song's origin as a Converse promotional collaboration, with lyrics evoking commercial environments like malls while promoting branded sneakers designed by the Gorillaz creators.[2][16] The full 13-minute version includes explicit content, such as profanity in André 3000's improvised rap (e.g., "Fuck around and get jumped like leap year" and "Rap ain’t nothing but the art of talkin’ shit"), adding raw intensity to the jam section's ad-libs, which Albarn described as an "insane progression" that evolved spontaneously over three days of recording.[11][2]Release and formats
Release history
"DoYaThing" was initially released on February 23, 2012, as a free digital download of the radio edit version exclusively through Converse's website as part of their "Three Artists. One Song" promotional campaign.[17] A promotional CD single containing both the radio edit and full versions was distributed to media outlets and industry professionals around the same time.[18] Physical formats were highly limited; a single-sided 10-inch vinyl pressing of the full 13-minute explicit version was issued on April 21, 2012, exclusively for Record Store Day in a limited edition run of 1000 copies (500 for North America, 500 for UK/Europe).[8] Commissioned by Converse, with copyright owned by EMI Records Ltd (Parlophone), the track has restricted commercial availability—it was never included on any official Gorillaz studio albums, not released on major streaming platforms, and was removed from the Converse site and Gorillaz website streaming following the end of the promotional campaign.[8] In the years after, unofficial streams of the song began appearing on platforms like YouTube around 2015, followed by an official upload of the full version to SoundCloud by Gorillaz in December 2021; as of November 2025, it remains unavailable on services like Spotify.[19][20]Track listing
"DoYaThing" was released exclusively through promotional and limited-edition formats tied to the Converse collaboration, with no standard commercial single produced.[3]Promotional CD
The promotional CD single contained both the radio edit and full version of the track.[18]| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "DoYaThing" (radio edit) | 4:27 |
| 2 | "DoYaThing" (full version) | 13:09 |
10" Vinyl
A limited-edition 10" vinyl was issued for Record Store Day 2012 on Parlophone and Converse labels, featuring the explicit full version on the A-side and an etched design on the B-side with no audio content.[8]| Side | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| A | "DoYaThing" (full version, explicit) | 13:09 |
| B | Etched design | — |