"Part of the Band" is a song by the English pop rock band the 1975, released on 7 July 2022 through Dirty Hit as the lead single from their fifth studio album, Being Funny in a Foreign Language.[1][2]Co-produced by the band's frontman Matty Healy, George Daniel, and Jack Antonoff, the track features a crisp string arrangement and introspective lyrics in which Healy reflects on past romantic relationships, including references to the poets Arthur Rimbaud and Paul Verlaine.[1] The song blends elements of folk-rock with midwestern emo influences and dreamy synths, showcasing a pared-back, rustic style that signals a reinvention for the band following their 2020 albumNotes on a Conditional Form.[2][1]Upon release, "Part of the Band" debuted and peaked at number 57 on the UK Singles Chart, according to the Official Charts Company.[3] It was accompanied by a black-and-white music video directed by Samuel Bradley, depicting the band performing alongside a string orchestra in a rural field.[1] Critics praised the single's fearless and provocative approach, noting its communal optimism and Healy's stream-of-consciousness songwriting as key aspects that preview the album's themes of personal reflection and cultural commentary.[2][](https://variety.com/2022/music/news/the-1975-new-part-of-the-band-1235311200/]
Background
Development
"Part of the Band" originated as an evolution of the track "New York," initially written by Benjamin Francis Leftwich in 2021, which Matty Healy adapted by contributing a bridge that formed the core of the new song to suit The 1975's style.[4][5][6] Healy had performed an early version of "New York" live during a support slot for Phoebe Bridgers in Los Angeles that year, but the bridge he added later became the foundation for "Part of the Band," transforming it into a distinct piece for the band.[7]On February 14, 2022, The 1975 deactivated their main social media accounts, including Instagram, as an initial teaser signaling new material, while Healy shared early lyric snippets on his personal Instagram around the same time to build anticipation.[8] This move coincided with the band's strategic pivot toward a more introspective, folk-influenced sound following the experimental breadth of their previous album, Notes on a Conditional Form.[9] In early June 2022, teaser billboards displaying fragments of the song's lyrics—such as "She was part of the Air Force / I was part of the band"—began appearing in various global locations, further heightening excitement for the upcoming release.[10][11]The band ultimately decided to position "Part of the Band" as the lead single for their fifth studio album, Being Funny in a Foreign Language, set for release in October 2022, emphasizing its role in showcasing this sonic evolution through a baroque-pop arrangement with string elements.[12] This choice reflected Healy's intent to explore personal reflection and stream-of-consciousness themes, marking a concise return to pop-rock roots after the sprawling experimentation of prior work.[13] The track's development involved collaboration with producer Jack Antonoff, who helped refine its folk-leaning structure.[14]
Recording
The recording sessions for "Part of the Band" occurred in 2022 at Electric Lady Studios in New York and RAK Studios in London, as part of the broader production for The 1975's fifth studio album.[15] The track was co-produced by band members Matty Healy and George Daniel alongside frequent collaborator Jack Antonoff, who contributed to shaping its sound during these sessions.[16] Antonoff also provided backing vocals, emphasizing a hands-on approach to vocal layering and arrangement.[7]The production incorporated live orchestral elements, featuring prominent strings, woodwinds, horns, and saxophone to create a lush, folk-rock texture.[17][18] These arrangements, handled by Healy and Antonoff, added cinematic depth, drawing from the song's evolution in earlier demos while focusing on organic instrumentation.[19] Japanese Breakfast's Michelle Zauner joined as a guest vocalist, delivering subtle backing vocals that complemented Healy's lead performance.[20]Mixing was handled by Manny Marroquin with assistance from Chris Galland and Jeremie Inhaber, while the track was mastered by Robin Schmidt, resulting in a final runtime of 4:20.[21] The song is composed in the key of F♯ major at a tempo of 142 beats per minute.[22]
Music and lyrics
Composition
"Part of the Band" blends elements of art pop, indie pop, and folk-rock, incorporating baroque and jazz influences through its orchestral textures and improvisational feel.[7][23] The song eschews a traditional chorus structure, instead unfolding as a series of stream-of-consciousness verses that build organically without rigid repetition.[2]The song originated from Benjamin Francis Leftwich's "New York," with Healy adding a bridge co-written with George Daniel and Jamie Squire; it features background vocals by Michelle Zauner.[7]Composed in the key of F♯ major, the track features Matty Healy's vocal delivery spanning from G♯3 to G♯5, allowing for a dynamic range that shifts between intimate whispers and fuller expressions.[22] The foundational instrumentation centers on acoustic guitar, providing a rustic base, while percussive strings and subtle woodwind accents add rhythmic nuance and a pastoral quality.[7] Lush orchestral swells, including driving cello runs and disjointed string sections, contribute to the nostalgic atmosphere, culminating in a bold saxophone solo that introduces jazz-inflected improvisation.[23][19]The arrangement evolved during sessions to emphasize a live-band energy, starting from a raw rock jam reminiscent of an E Street Band-style demo and incorporating orchestral augmentation for greater emotional depth, achieved through spontaneous instrument swaps and naturalistic recordings.[7][19] This process, co-produced by Jack Antonoff, prioritized a modern "band in a room" sound with folk and orchestral elements blended seamlessly.[19]
Lyrics
"Part of the Band" employs a stream-of-consciousness writing style, characteristic of Matty Healy's approach, where lyrics flow as unfiltered personal reflections without a traditional verse-chorus structure, allowing for an introspective and associative narrative.[24] This method, influenced by rhythmic phrasing akin to spoken-word delivery, builds vulnerability through escalating melodic peaks in Healy's vocals, emphasizing raw emotional exposure.[24] The song's lyrics, teased initially via Healy's Instagram in June 2022, eschew an explicit chorus to maintain a continuous, confessional flow that mirrors the chaos of inner thought.[25]Thematically, the lyrics delve into nostalgia for youth and past relationships, juxtaposed with the ambivalence of aging and fame in band life. Healy reflects on early romantic encounters, such as "She was part of the Air Force, I was part of the band / I always used to bust into her hand / In my, my, my imagination," evoking idealized memories of living carefree with his parents before the band's rise.[21] This nostalgia extends to cultural touchstones like the Air Force reference, symbolizing youthful innocence and fleeting connections from his pre-fame days.[26] Aging brings self-loathing and identity questioning, as in "Am I ironically woke? / The butt of my joke? Or am I just some post-coke, average, skinny bloke / Calling his ego imagination?," critiquing personal hypocrisy amid fame's distortions.[24]Critiques of modern social media culture permeate the text, highlighting performative wokeness and superficial trends, exemplified by "Leopards, launching, wearing vegetables / Drunk to hell, God knows what we're doing" and "vaccinista tote-bag-chic baristas," which satirize East London's hipster excesses and online virtue-signaling.[26]Ambivalence toward band life surfaces in the recurring motif of being "part of the band," underscoring Healy's conflicted relationship with celebrity and group dynamics, while lines such as "I'm in love with the girls in the group" nod to attractions rooted in shared history.[27] References to past loves, including a recent split, infuse the lyrics with relational introspection, as Healy notes writing from a place of emotional maturity post-breakup.[26]These elements connect to the broader narrative of Being Funny in a Foreign Language, where Healy processes personal growth following the 2020 pandemic, shifting from ironic detachment to sincere vulnerability in examining love, communication, and self amid digitalmediation.[24] The lyrics' scatting-derived rhymes, like those in "my cancellations," stem from Healy's pandemic-era deactivation of Twitter after controversial posts, allowing focused, objective reflection on cultural issues.[26]
Release and promotion
Single release
"Part of the Band" was released on July 7, 2022, by the English band the 1975 through their label Dirty Hit as the lead single from their fifth studio album, Being Funny in a Foreign Language, which came out on October 14, 2022.[1][28]The single was issued in digital download and streaming formats, becoming immediately accessible on major platforms including Spotify and Apple Music.[29]It premiered on BBC Radio 1's Future Sounds show hosted by Clara Amfo, marking the band's return after a two-year hiatus from new music.[30]Positioned as an indicator of the album's direction, the track represented a sonic shift from the electronic and experimental elements dominant in the band's prior release, Notes on a Conditional Form (2020), toward a more organic, guitar-led sound with orchestral touches.[23]
Music video
The music video for "Part of the Band," directed by Samuel Bradley, premiered on July 7, 2022, via the band's official YouTube channel, aligning with the single's release.[31] Produced by Amelia Studios with creative direction from Patricia Villirillo, it adopts a black-and-white aesthetic inspired by filmmakers such as Ingmar Bergman and Anton Corbijn, presenting an enigmatic and interpretive narrative through vintage, experimental cinematography.[32][31]Filmed on location at Shellness Beach in Kent, England, the video captures the band performing amid a rural, windswept field, joined by a full string orchestra of teenage violinists to emphasize the track's orchestral elements and live energy.[1][33] Intercut with abstract vignettes—featuring giant balloons, eccentric characters like priests and businessmen, and surreal pastoral scenes—the visuals evoke a serene idyll that contrasts the song's introspective lyrics on personal reflection and relationships.[32] The runtime mirrors the song at 4:20, prioritizing a fluid, performance-driven flow shot with Panavision equipment and Kodak film.[31]The video's thematic focus on ambiguity and nostalgia amplifies the track's exploration of time and memory, blending communal musicality with isolated reverie to create a dreamlike atmosphere.[32] By November 2025, it had accumulated over 6 million views on YouTube, underscoring its enduring appeal as a visual companion to the album Being Funny in a Foreign Language.[31]
Reception
Critical response
Upon its release as the lead single from Being Funny in a Foreign Language, "Part of the Band" received widespread critical acclaim for its bold departure from the band's previous sound, blending orchestral folk elements with introspective lyrics. NME awarded the track four out of five stars, praising its "fearlessness" in "ripping up their own rule book" through a fusion of midwestern emo influences and dreamy synths, marking a nuanced reinvention of The 1975's style. Pitchfork highlighted the song's "patient orchestral folk" and "neurotic lyrics," ranking it 13th on their list of the best songs of 2022 for its emotional depth and as a thematic outlier on the album. The Guardian described it as a "surprising but welcome paring back," eschewing the band's typical bombast for rustic minimalism while commending its witty and honest lyrical reflections on fame and personal growth.Some reviews offered mixed assessments, noting the song's chorus-less structure and subdued energy as a departure from The 1975's more anthemic hits, which occasionally lacked immediate hooks but enhanced its introspective mood. Pitchfork observed that it might initially seem like the band "chilling out a little" compared to their hyperactive rock past, yet this restraint amplified the neurotic introspection at its core. Despite such critiques, the track's lyrical honesty was broadly praised, with The Guardian calling it "wistful and witty" in capturing Matty Healy's self-aware confessions.The song featured prominently in year-end rankings, placing third on TIME's list of the best songs of 2022 for its clever wordplay and melodic charm, and 29th on NME's compilation of the year's top tracks, celebrated for its stream-of-consciousness neurosis and distortion-laden production. In the context of the album, which earned a Metacritic score of 82 out of 100 based on 16 reviews indicating universal acclaim, "Part of the Band" was often cited as a standout opener that exemplified the record's refined pop focus.Following the album's release, retrospective views evolved positively, particularly after live performances in 2023 and beyond, where the song was lauded for showcasing the band's maturity. The Guardian's coverage of The 1975's 2025 Glastonbury headline set described "Part of the Band" as "packed with authentically funny lines," underscoring its enduring appeal in capturing Healy's evolved songwriting amid the band's meta-infused stage presence. NME's 2025 review of a live album from their Manchester shows further praised the track's orchestral flair in a concert setting, highlighting its role in demonstrating the group's artistic growth post-2022.
Commercial performance
"Part of the Band" debuted and peaked at number 57 on the UK Singles Chart in 2022.[3] It also reached number one on the UK Indie Singles Chart.[34] In Ireland, the song peaked at number 70 on the Irish Singles Chart.[35]Internationally, the single achieved moderate success on several charts. It peaked at number six on the Billboard Japan Hot Overseas Songs chart, number 14 on the New Zealand Hot Singles chart, and number 29 on the US Hot Rock & Alternative Songs chart.
By 2025, "Part of the Band" had amassed over 100 million streams on Spotify, with its popularity sustained by the release of the parent album Being Funny in a Foreign Language and subsequent live recordings.The single did not receive any major certifications. However, as the lead track from Being Funny in a Foreign Language, it contributed to the album's strong commercial debut at number one on the UK Albums Chart in October 2022, marking The 1975's fifth consecutive chart-topping album.[3][36]
Performances and legacy
Live performances
The 1975 debuted 'Part of the Band' live during their appearance on BBC Radio 1's Live Lounge on October 11, 2022, presenting a stripped-down arrangement that highlighted the song's introspective lyrics and acoustic elements.[37][38] This performance marked the track's first public outing, following its studio release earlier that year, and was accompanied by covers of other artists' material in the session format.[39]The song became a staple of the band's At Their Very Best Tour, which spanned from late 2022 to 2024, often positioned early in the setlist to energize crowds with its upbeat tempo and nostalgic vibe. Notable renditions included the November 7, 2022, show at Madison Square Garden in New York, where it followed 'Happiness' and transitioned into a high-energy segment of the performance.[40] Similarly, during the tour's UK leg, it featured prominently at the AO Arena in Manchester on February 18, 2024, closing the opening sequence before deeper cuts from their catalog.[41] An additional highlight was the Vevo Official Live Performance captured in October 2022, which captured the band in a studio setting with a polished, full-band delivery shortly after the Live Lounge debut.[42]In 2025, amid a touring hiatus following the 2024 tour as the band focused on new material, 'Part of the Band' was performed at Glastonbury Festival on June 27, serving as The 1975's sole live appearance that year and a headline slot on the Pyramid Stage.[43][44] The set drew praise for its blend of irony and emotional depth, with the song eliciting strong audience sing-alongs during its mid-set placement. This Glastonbury performance was a standalone event separate from their prior tour.Live adaptations of 'Part of the Band' evolved across performances, initially featuring full band instrumentation and occasional orchestral swells to amplify its chamber-pop roots, as seen in early tour dates.[45] By later stages, including the 2024 Manchester show, arrangements shifted to foreground frontman Matty Healy's storytelling monologues, integrating personal anecdotes that enhanced the song's themes of reflection and band camaraderie.[46][47] The live album Still... At Their Very Best, released on March 7, 2025, includes a recording of the song from the band's February 17, 2024, performance at the AO Arena in Manchester.[48]
Cultural impact
"Part of the Band" resonated with fans for its candid lyrics addressing mental health struggles and the complexities of relationships, earning praise for its introspective and self-aware tone. Music critics highlighted how the track's stream-of-consciousness style captured personal vulnerabilities in a relatable manner, fostering deep emotional connections among listeners.[49][50]The song received notable media coverage, appearing on NPR's list of the 100 Best Songs of 2022 at number 80 and in NME's selection of the year's top tracks.[51][52]As a cornerstone of The 1975's shift toward a more mature and reflective sound, the track symbolized their evolution from earlier synth-pop influences to folk-infused narratives. Its inclusion on the 2025 live album Still... At Their Very Best, recorded during a Manchester performance in February 2024, helped sustain its cultural presence amid the band's hiatus from touring in 2024-2025.[53][54]In the broader landscape of indie rock, "Part of the Band" contributed to dialogues on genre innovation by merging orchestral elements with raw emotional depth, influencing perceptions of the form's progression. The band's headline performance of the song at Glastonbury Festival in 2025 stood as a pivotal moment during their break from regular touring.[55][56]