Level of Concern
"Level of Concern" is a song written, produced, and performed by the American musical duo Twenty One Pilots, released as a standalone single on April 9, 2020.[1] Recorded remotely during the initial COVID-19 lockdowns, the track captures vocalist Tyler Joseph's reflections on pandemic-induced isolation, financial strain, and emotional turmoil, juxtaposed with optimism for human connection and perseverance.[2] A portion of its proceeds was donated to the Crew Nation initiative, a relief fund aiding live music crew members impacted by event cancellations.[2] The song marked a departure from the duo's typical album cycle, emerging spontaneously to address contemporary anxieties without prior promotion, yet it garnered immediate streaming success, entering the top 10 on U.S. Spotify daily charts.[3] Commercially, it peaked at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100, topped the Rock Airplay chart, and held the number-one position on the Alternative Songs chart for three weeks, underscoring Twenty One Pilots' adaptability in delivering resonant pop-alternative material amid global uncertainty.[4]Background and Development
Writing and Inspiration
"Level of Concern" originated from Tyler Joseph's personal experiences during the initial COVID-19 lockdowns in early 2020, reflecting anxieties about isolation and relational uncertainties heightened by the pandemic. Joseph, who serves as the band's primary songwriter, drew inspiration from interactions with his wife, Jenna Joseph, incorporating themes of seeking marital reassurance amid enforced separation from normal social and familial routines.[5][6] His mother, Kelly Joseph, also played a role in motivating him to address the pandemic's emotional toll directly through songwriting.[7] The track emerged as a swift creative response to the quarantine conditions, with Joseph completing it in a matter of days using electric guitar for the first time in his composition process. This quick genesis aligned with the broader uncertainty of March and April 2020, when Twenty One Pilots' tour schedules were disrupted, leading to the decision to issue it as a standalone single.[5] Proceeds from the release were partially donated to Crew Nation, a relief fund aiding live music touring crews impacted by canceled performances due to lockdowns.[2] By focusing on intimate relational dynamics rather than expansive societal critique, the song encapsulated Joseph's first-principles approach to channeling immediate personal concerns into music, distinct from the band's ongoing album work. This standalone effort underscored the duo's adaptability, with Joseph handling lyrics and core melody to capture the era's pervasive sense of relational fragility without delving into production or thematic analysis.[8]Recording Process
The recording of "Level of Concern" occurred primarily at Tyler Joseph's home studio in Columbus, Ohio, during early April 2020, as COVID-19 lockdowns prevented access to conventional recording facilities.[5] This home-based approach utilized a minimal setup, with Joseph handling vocals, instrumentation, and initial production.[5] Unlike prior album sessions, such as those for Trench (2018) which involved extended studio collaborations with multiple contributors in professional environments, the process emphasized self-sufficiency amid pandemic constraints.[8] Josh Dun contributed drum tracks remotely from his separate location, with the duo exchanging audio files by mailing a USB drive back and forth, as depicted in the song's music video.[9] Paul Meany co-produced the track, adding keys and background vocals, while Adam Hawkins served as mixing engineer.[8] The swift finalization enabled release on April 9, 2020, via Fueled by Ramen, reflecting the streamlined workflow necessitated by isolation measures.[8]Release Context
"Level of Concern" was issued as a standalone digital single on April 9, 2020, diverging from conventional album release strategies amid the escalating COVID-19 pandemic.[10] The track's rollout followed social media teasers announced the prior day, coinciding with the debut of its accompanying music video.[11] A portion of the single's proceeds was allocated to Crew Nation, Live Nation's relief fund aiding live music touring and venue personnel displaced by pandemic-related event cancellations.[2] This initiative reflected broader industry efforts to mitigate economic fallout from global lockdowns that halted live performances.[12] The timing aligned with documented surges in public mental health challenges, including a 25% global rise in anxiety and depression prevalence during the pandemic's first year, as reported by the World Health Organization based on analyses of studies from early 2020 onward.[13] No physical formats were produced initially, distinguishing the release from prior Twenty One Pilots projects that typically included vinyl and CD editions.[14] The song was not incorporated into the standard tracklist of the band's subsequent album Scaled and Icy (2021), though it appeared in associated livestream performances.[15]Musical Composition and Production
Genre and Structure
"Level of Concern" is categorized as dance-pop incorporating funk rock and indietronica elements.[16][17] The track deviates from Twenty One Pilots' predominant alternative rock and hip-hop foundations by emphasizing upbeat, groove-oriented rhythms driven by a prominent funky bassline and synth hooks.[18][16] The song adheres to a standard verse–pre-chorus–chorus structure, featuring two verses, multiple choruses, and a bridge that introduces melodic variation before returning to the chorus.[19] It spans a runtime of 3 minutes and 40 seconds, set in E minor at a tempo of 122 beats per minute, which contributes to its energetic, danceable pace.[20][21] Musically, the composition exhibits notable chord-melody tension, with a complexity score of 74 for chords and 83 for tension between melody and harmony, alongside moderate progression novelty at 62, fostering dynamic interplay within its pop framework.[22] These elements underscore a shift toward accessible, hook-driven arrangements compared to the band's earlier, more introspective alternative styles.Instrumentation and Style
"Level of Concern" features prominent electric guitar riffs performed by Tyler Joseph, which establish the song's melodic core and contribute to its catchy, accessible appeal.[2] These riffs are layered with Josh Dun's programmed electronic drums and percussion, forming a steady, groove-oriented rhythm that emphasizes danceability.[23] The combination creates an upbeat pulse suitable for broader radio play, blending rock elements with electronic textures.[23] The track adopts a lighter, synth-driven style, marking a departure from the heavier, more brooding instrumentation of the duo's prior album Trench.[23] Bright synth lines enhance the song's immediate, pop-oriented energy, prioritizing rhythmic drive over intricate layering.[23] This polished yet restrained production avoids excessive density, preserving a raw immediacy that aligns with its standalone single format.[2]Production Techniques
"Level of Concern" was produced by Tyler Joseph in collaboration with Paul Meany of Mutemath, with recording taking place primarily at Joseph's home studio in Columbus, Ohio, during the initial COVID-19 quarantine in April 2020.[8][24] Drummer Josh Dun contributed remotely from Los Angeles, facilitating a streamlined process that allowed the track to be completed and released rapidly to provide upbeat distraction amid widespread isolation.[25] This home-based, distributed workflow prioritized efficiency, enabling high-quality output without traditional studio logistics. Engineering duties fell to Adam Hawkins, who applied vocal tuning and layering techniques to achieve a sleek, radio-friendly polish suitable for immediate streaming consumption.[24] Auto-Tune was employed on Joseph's lead vocals, creating a tight, modern sheen that enhanced melodic precision while preserving emotional delivery, a choice aligned with the song's pop-dance orientation for mass accessibility.[26] Effects such as reverb were integrated judiciously on elements like bass and synths to evoke spatial movement and escapism, countering the static feel of pandemic confinement without introducing overly synthetic expansiveness.[27] The final mastering focused on balanced dynamic range, optimizing loudness for platform algorithms while retaining punchy transients essential to the track's energetic drive, ensuring compatibility across digital services like Spotify and Apple Music where it garnered millions of streams shortly after release.[28] This approach reflected deliberate choices for broad appeal, blending DIY immediacy with professional finesse to resonate in a time of uncertainty.Lyrics and Themes
Lyrical Content
The lyrics of "Level of Concern" adopt a first-person narrative, conveying a protagonist's mounting personal anxiety triggered by external chaos and internal relational strain. The opening verse introduces themes of escalating worry through direct imagery: "Panic on the brain, world has gone insane / Things are starting to get heavy / I can't help but think I might be going heavy."[29] This sets a tone of self-doubt and mental burden, with the narrator rejecting pity while admitting vulnerability: "No, I don't need sympathy / The worry is on my mind / I try to tell myself I'm fine / But I don't know if I can."[29] The repetitive chorus forms the song's core, emphasizing pleas for emotional reassurance amid perceived indifference: "'Cause I told you my level of concern / But you walked by like you never heard / And you could bring down my level of concern / Just need you to tell me we're alright, tell me we're okay."[29] These lines highlight relational doubts, rooted in Tyler Joseph's reflections on the early hesitancy in his relationship with his wife Jenna, where he sensed uneven investment despite his eagerness.[30] The structure repeats this post-chorus immediately, reinforcing the cycle of unheeded concern without delving into symbolism.[29] Subsequent verses maintain the intimate, confessional style, alluding to prolonged strain and isolation: "I know it's been a long road / When I asked you to stay / I didn't mean to say that much / But I said it anyway / Wonderin', would you be my little quarantine? / Or is this the way it ends?"[29] Written during the initial COVID-19 quarantine in April 2020, these elements draw from Joseph's temporary separation from his wife and young daughter, amplifying the personal turmoil of uncertainty in familial bonds.[7] The lyrics conclude by cycling back to the chorus, prioritizing raw emotional directness over abstraction.[29]Interpretations and Criticisms
The song "Level of Concern" is chiefly interpreted as a raw articulation of the psychological strain from COVID-19-induced isolation, capturing lead vocalist Tyler Joseph's introspection on relational uncertainty and the desire for companionship amid enforced separation. Joseph has described the track's genesis in personal quarantine experiences, linking pandemic-related anxiety to fears of emotional disconnection, exemplified in pleas for reassurance from his wife. This reading aligns with the song's temporal context, released on April 9, 2020, during widespread lockdowns that disrupted social norms and heightened individual vulnerability.[5][30] Critics have faulted the track for prioritizing upbeat pop accessibility over the profound intensity characteristic of Twenty One Pilots' earlier work, such as the introspective urgency in albums like Trench. Music reviewer Anthony Fantano offered a tempered evaluation, commending the polished production and melodic hooks while decrying the diluted emotional weight and absence of the duo's signature raw confrontation with inner turmoil. Others have characterized it as lightweight escapism, arguing that its glossy synth-pop veneer glosses over deeper mental health inquiry, rendering the anxiety theme more as a relatable hook than a substantive probe.[31][32] Alternative perspectives question the song's amplification of anxiety as a default response to isolation, positing it as emblematic of broader cultural tendencies to normalize and escalate unsubstantiated fears through artistic and media channels. Empirical data from the pandemic era reveal that while lockdowns correlated with elevated anxiety in vulnerable subgroups—such as those with preexisting conditions—resilience prevailed across much of the population, with protective factors like social support and adaptive coping buffering against widespread psychological collapse. Research indicates that excessive consumption of crisis-oriented media, rather than isolation alone, drove disproportionate distress, suggesting works like "Level of Concern" may inadvertently contribute to this feedback loop by framing transient unease as existential peril without counterbalancing evidence of human adaptability.[33][34][35]Promotion and Visual Media
Official Music Video
The official music video for "Level of Concern" premiered on the band's official YouTube channel on April 9, 2020, coinciding with the single's release.[1] Filmed amid the initial COVID-19 lockdowns, it adopts a low-budget, do-it-yourself aesthetic consistent with quarantine restrictions, utilizing a single domestic interior as the primary setting.[36][37] In the video, vocalist Tyler Joseph and drummer Josh Dun perform amid a surreal, confined home environment, marked by rapid transitions through dozens of colorful, mismatched outfits—ranging from casual attire to exaggerated costumes.[10] These frequent wardrobe changes, executed without leaving the space, visually echo the song's narrative of employing superficial distractions to cope with escalating personal and global anxiety during isolation.[38] The production emphasizes improvisation and limited resources, with Dun drumming on household surfaces and Joseph engaging in choreographed movements that blend performance with everyday domestic elements, underscoring the track's origin as a timely response to pandemic-induced uncertainty.[39]Never-Ending Video and Fan Contributions
On June 21, 2020, Twenty One Pilots initiated the "Level of Concern (Never-Ending Music Video)", a YouTube livestream that dynamically incorporated fan-submitted video clips in real time, restarting the song every 3 minutes and 40 seconds to display fresh content.[40][38] Fans accessed a dedicated submission portal at loc.twentyonepilots.com to upload personal footage, often capturing daily life amid COVID-19 quarantines, which the platform filtered and sequenced to align with the track's rhythm and lyrics.[41][24] This participatory format transformed the video into a crowdsourced mosaic, emphasizing themes of isolation and resilience echoed in the song's content.[42] The project leveraged technology from collaborator Imposium to handle real-time integration, enabling seamless transitions between official segments and user-generated clips without interruptions.[43] Over its duration, it amassed more than 162,000 submissions from global participants, fostering organic engagement as fans contributed unscripted moments like home routines and emotional reflections, distinct from the band's initial self-produced video.[43][44] No paid advertising drove participation; growth stemmed from viral sharing within the fanbase, highlighting the duo's direct appeal during pandemic uncertainties.[40] The livestream operated continuously for 177 days, concluding around mid-December 2020 due to operational constraints in managing escalating submissions and server demands.[44][45] It earned a Guinness World Record for the longest-running music video, underscoring its technical innovation in sustaining indefinite playback via looped fan inputs.[43][44] Post-termination, the archived stream persists on YouTube, preserving the collaborative chronicle as a digital artifact of 2020's collective experience.[45]Alternate Reality Game
The alternate reality game (ARG) promoting "Level of Concern" launched on June 12, 2020, via a livestream displaying cryptic images, videos, and symbols that directed fans to hidden codes.[46] Participants entered these codes on the website usb.twentyonepilots.com to access virtual USB drive folders containing downloadable audio files, images from the band's personal devices, and additional puzzles.[47] Clues were embedded in diverse formats, including social media posts, closed captions from the song's original music video, and encrypted messages requiring anagrams, heterograms, and pattern recognition to solve.[40] A promotional phone hotline, 1-877-LVL-CNRN, offered automated instructions outlining the hunt's objective of decoding sequential levels.[48] The ARG demanded collaborative effort from the band's fanbase, with online communities rapidly sharing discoveries to progress through 20 interconnected codes.[46] Early codes unlocked initial virtual content, while later ones escalated complexity, incorporating multimedia riddles that tied into recurring motifs from prior Twenty One Pilots releases without resolving broader narrative arcs.[49] Completion of the 20th code rewarded select participants with physical USB flash drives mailed in October 2020, containing exclusive audio and tying into extended promotional elements.[49] This puzzle-based mechanic built sustained hype ahead of the song's extended video release on June 21, 2020, by leveraging fan-driven decoding to amplify organic sharing across platforms.[46] The ARG's structure encouraged repeated engagement with "Level of Concern" assets, contributing to its sixth week at number one on alternative radio charts during the campaign.[41]Performances and Live Elements
Live Debuts and Versions
The first live performance of "Level of Concern" occurred on May 22, 2020, during a remote appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, with Tyler Joseph and Josh Dun performing from their driveway in Columbus, Ohio, to comply with COVID-19 social distancing protocols.[50][51] The rendition featured Joseph on vocals, ukulele, and keyboard, alongside Dun on drums, augmented by remote contributions from bassist Simon Jefferies, saxophonist Jesse Blum of MisterWives, and multi-instrumentalist Paul Meany of Mutemath.[52] An official audio release, "Level of Concern (Live from Outside)", followed on May 26, 2020, capturing elements of the Fallon performance with minor lyrical tweaks—such as altered phrasing in the bridge for rhythmic emphasis—and a more expansive mix incorporating the additional instrumentation for a live feel despite the isolated setup.[53][54] Proceeds from the single and related merchandise sales supported Crew Nation, Live Nation's relief fund for out-of-work touring personnel impacted by pandemic shutdowns.[55] This driveway adaptation highlighted the song's versatility in virtual formats, stripping back production to essentials while maintaining its upbeat tempo, which early observers noted as a resilient response to venue closures that halted traditional live music.[53] No further pre-tour virtual renditions were documented in the immediate release period, prioritizing the quarantine-constrained broadcast over standalone acoustic variants.[52]Tour Integration
Following the band's return to live touring after the COVID-19 pandemic, "Level of Concern" saw inclusion in setlists for the Takeøver Tour (late 2021 to early 2022) and The Icy Tour (summer 2022), with performances often featuring a "Low Rider" instrumental intro by War for added rhythmic buildup suitable to arena environments.[56][57] These renditions were adapted for high-energy venues, sometimes shortened by omitting the second verse to maintain pacing amid extended medleys transitioning into tracks like "Ride" and "Car Radio," as documented in multiple concert reports.[58] The song's standalone single status contributed to its perceived rarity relative to album staples, with fan discussions highlighting limited rotations beyond these tours despite its thematic resonance with pandemic-era isolation.[59] Visual elements in live performances echoed motifs from the song's music video, such as dynamic lighting and stage interactions evoking uncertainty and escapism, amplified by the full backing band introduced for the Takeøver Tour to enhance crowd engagement in large-scale settings.[60] Sporadic appearances continued into 2023, including a one-off at the Columbus Zoo and Aquarium on September 10, but the track totaled only 65 documented plays overall, underscoring its non-recurring role post-2022.[61] In the Clancy World Tour (2024-2025), "Level of Concern" has not featured in standard setlists, with no verified inclusions amid a focus on Clancy album material and earlier hits, reflecting a shift away from Scaled and Icy-era outliers.[62] This absence aligns with setlist patterns prioritizing narrative continuity from the band's lore-driven releases, relegating the single to occasional archival or special-event revivals rather than routine integration.[56]Reception and Impact
Critical Reviews
Critics generally praised "Level of Concern" for its timely release during the early COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting its upbeat disco-influenced sound as a source of levity and connection in isolation. Rolling Stone described the track as one that "dance toward hope," noting its shimmering guitar riff—Joseph's first composition on electric guitar—and lyrics addressing pandemic-induced anxiety, such as worries over employment and relationships.[23] Similarly, Exeposé commended its accessibility, calling it an "easy track to listen to, to dance to, [and] to sing to," positioning it as an effective distraction amid global uncertainty.[63] Detractors, however, argued that the song's lighter, pop-centric approach deviated from Twenty One Pilots' established introspective and genre-blending depth, resulting in a perceived lack of artistic substance. A review on Album of the Year characterized the production as "happy-go-lucky" but insufficiently innovative to distinguish itself in contemporary pop, suggesting it prioritized vibe over complexity.[64] This sentiment echoed broader critiques of the duo's pandemic-era output, where the shift to brighter tones was seen by some as diluting the emotional intensity of albums like Trench (2018).[65] Reception coalesced around a mixed-to-positive consensus among available professional outlets, with emphasis on the single's functional uplift rather than groundbreaking musicianship; no aggregated score exists, as it was not reviewed on platforms like Metacritic, which typically cover albums.[66] Outlets like Jesus Freak Hideout endorsed it as essential for fans seeking reassurance, reinforcing its role as a morale booster without overshadowing its stylistic departures.[66]Commercial Success
"Level of Concern" debuted at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated April 25, 2020, marking Twenty One Pilots' highest Hot 100 entry since "Stressed Out" in 2016. It simultaneously launched at number 1 on the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart and number 1 on Rock Digital Song Sales, reflecting strong initial digital purchase activity amid the early COVID-19 lockdowns.[67] The track reached number 1 on the Alternative Airplay chart dated May 9, 2020, where it held the top position for multiple weeks, including a third consecutive week as of May 31, 2020, based on Mediabase-monitored airplay spins exceeding 3,300 per tracking period.[68][69] On streaming platforms, "Level of Concern" garnered 924,164 U.S. streams on April 10, 2020, propelling it to number 6 on the daily U.S. Spotify chart and number 25 globally.[3] By late 2020, cumulative Spotify streams surpassed 66 million from its April release, contributing to its year-end prominence on alternative playlists.[70] Internationally, the single peaked at number 42 on the UK Singles Chart, logging 11 weeks overall.[71] In Australia, it reached number 85 on the ARIA Singles Chart for one week in 2020.[72] Airplay data post-2020 shows no equivalent sustained radio traction, with the song's momentum tied primarily to its 2020 pandemic-release context.[73]Cultural and Social Context
"Level of Concern" was released on April 9, 2020, coinciding with stringent COVID-19 lockdowns across the United States and escalating global case counts surpassing 1.2 million, capturing the pervasive anxiety driven by daily media reports of rising infections and mortality.[10] The track's themes of personal uncertainty and isolation mirrored the era's heightened fears, which research attributes in part to media coverage amplifying perceived risks through fear-laden headlines, fostering rigid public responses despite epidemiological data indicating age-stratified vulnerabilities.[74] A portion of proceeds supported Crew Nation, delivering concrete relief to live music crews amid industry-wide cancellations that resulted in over $30 billion in global losses for 2020.[75][76] Positioned as a "quarantine anthem," the song offered an upbeat counterpoint to isolation but aligned with a broader wave of pandemic-inspired music that, while providing temporary escapism, has faced scrutiny for potentially romanticizing solitude absent robust evidence of psychological benefits.[10] Empirical studies document lockdowns' role in a 25% global surge in anxiety and depression prevalence during the pandemic's first year, underscoring isolation's causal toll rather than any ennobling narrative.[13] Its cultural legacy remains confined to the 2020 context, with minimal enduring resonance beyond niche fan engagements; sporadic TikTok features via covers and discussions persist, yet the track prompted no sustained shifts in popular discourse or behavioral norms post-restrictions.[30]Credits and Personnel
[Credits and Personnel - no content]Charts and Certifications
Weekly Charts
"Level of Concern" debuted at number 23 on the Billboard Hot 100 dated April 25, 2020, which became its peak position. It simultaneously debuted at number 1 on the Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.[67] The track rose to number 1 on the Alternative Airplay chart in its fourth week and remained there for at least 10 consecutive weeks.[68][77] It also topped the Rock Airplay chart after five weeks.[4] Internationally, the song peaked at number 42 on the UK Singles Chart and spent 11 weeks there.[78]| Chart | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard Hot 100 | 23 | |
| US Billboard Alternative Airplay | 1 | ≥10 (at #1) |
| US Billboard Rock Airplay | 1 | |
| US Billboard Hot Rock & Alternative Songs | 1 | |
| UK Singles (Official Charts Company) | 42 | 11 |
Year-End Charts
"Level of Concern" topped Billboard's Alternative Airplay year-end chart for 2020, marking the first time Twenty One Pilots achieved the number-one position on that annual ranking.[79] The track's success in alternative radio formats reflected its strong airplay performance amid the COVID-19 pandemic, during which it debuted and peaked at number one on the weekly Alternative Airplay chart in May 2020.[79] The song secured the top two spots alongside "The Hype" on Billboard's Rock Airplay year-end chart for 2020, underscoring Twenty One Pilots' dominance in rock-oriented radio audiences that year.[73] However, it did not appear on major all-genre year-end lists such as the Billboard Hot 100, where its peak weekly position of number 23 limited broader pop crossover impact. Streaming metrics contributed to its genre-specific rankings, though it was absent from prominent global or all-format streaming year-end compilations like Spotify's Wrapped top songs.[79]Certifications
"Level of Concern" achieved RIAA Platinum certification in the United States on November 24, 2021, denoting 1,000,000 equivalent units comprising sales, downloads, and streaming activity.[80] The track initially reached Gold status, equivalent to 500,000 units, earlier in September 2020, prior to the upgrade reflecting sustained consumption.[81] No certifications at Platinum level or higher have been awarded in other regions as of October 2025, including Australia via ARIA or Canada through Music Canada.[82]| Region | Certifying Body | Certification | Date Certified | Units Equivalent |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | RIAA | Platinum | November 24, 2021 | 1,000,000 |