Reflektor
Reflektor is the fourth studio album by the Canadian indie rock band Arcade Fire, released on October 28, 2013, through Sonovox Records and Merge Records.[1][2] The double album consists of 13 tracks spanning 75 minutes, featuring a blend of indie rock, disco, and electronic elements, and was recorded across multiple studios in Montreal, New York, and Jamaica.[3][4] Co-produced by the band alongside James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem and longtime collaborator Markus Dravs, Reflektor explores themes of isolation, identity, and existential reflection, drawing inspiration from Greek mythology, Haitian rara music, and personal introspection.[4][5] The album's title track, featuring guest vocals from David Bowie, was released as the lead single on September 9, 2013, and is characterized by its pulsating rhythm and philosophical lyrics about entrapment in modernity.[2] Notable tracks include "We Exist," addressing transgender experiences, and "Normal Person," delving into self-doubt and societal pressures.[6] Upon release, Reflektor received widespread critical acclaim for its ambitious scope and innovative sound, debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 and topping charts in several countries.[7] It earned a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Album at the 57th Annual Grammy Awards in 2015, though it did not win.[8] The album solidified Arcade Fire's reputation as a premier indie rock act.[6]Development
Background
Following the critical and commercial success of their 2010 album The Suburbs, which earned Arcade Fire the Grammy Award for Album of the Year in February 2011, the band began conceptual discussions for their next project. This victory marked a pivotal transition, elevating their profile while prompting reflections on their evolving sound and creative direction. Initial ideas emerged in 2011 during sessions in Montreal, where band members expressed interest in exploring new musical territories beyond their established orchestral indie rock style.[7] A significant inspiration for Reflektor stemmed from the Haitian heritage of co-founder Régine Chassagne, whose parents emigrated from Haiti. The band drew deeply from Haitian culture, particularly after visits to the country following the 2010 earthquake, which devastated the region and heightened Chassagne's personal connection to her roots. Win Butler, Chassagne's husband and the band's frontman, cited experiences in Haiti, including interactions with local music and art, as key influences that infused the album's conceptual framework with rhythmic and cultural elements from Haitian Vodou traditions.[9][10] To facilitate a shift toward more rhythmic, dance-oriented elements, Arcade Fire enlisted James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem as co-producer in 2012, alongside regular collaborator Markus Dravs. Murphy's involvement was deliberate, aiming to incorporate electronic and groove-driven influences that contrasted with the band's prior orchestral emphasis, resulting in a broader, more global sonic palette. This partnership built on early 2011 discussions, allowing the group to experiment with dance-rock dynamics while honoring their conceptual inspirations.[7][11]Writing
The songwriting for Arcade Fire's fourth studio album, Reflektor, was a collaborative effort primarily led by frontman Win Butler and multi-instrumentalist Régine Chassagne, with the pair handling the bulk of lyric and structure development during intensive sessions. These took place mainly in Montreal, their hometown, and extended to Jamaica, where the band worked in a more isolated environment to foster creativity. The process emphasized Butler and Chassagne's partnership, drawing on their shared personal dynamics to shape the album's core ideas.[12] Inspiration stemmed from intimate aspects of their lives, including the complexities of marriage, explorations of religion, and the pervasive sense of modern disconnection in an increasingly digital world. For instance, the title track "Reflektor" emerged from reflections on Plato's cave allegory, symbolizing shadows of reality and the search for authentic connection amid superficiality. Other songs evolved from initial demos that captured raw emotional states; "We Exist" began as a simple piano sketch addressing themes of identity and marginalization, gradually expanding through iterative revisions, while "Normal Person" originated in a spontaneous jam session grappling with self-doubt and societal norms. These Haitian rhythmic influences, rooted in Chassagne's heritage, subtly informed the lyrical flow in select tracks.[12][5] The primary writing phase spanned from late 2011 to early 2012, allowing the band to build a foundation of demos before involving additional collaborators. Revisions continued fluidly into the recording stage, where Butler and Chassagne refined structures based on emerging musical ideas, ensuring the lyrics aligned tightly with the album's overarching narrative of introspection and renewal. This iterative approach underscored the duo's commitment to evolving songs organically from personal vulnerability into cohesive artistic statements.[12]Recording
The recording sessions for Reflektor primarily took place at Sonovox Studios in Montreal, the band's own facility, where the bulk of the album was captured over 14 months of full-time work.[4] Additional sessions occurred at Trident Castle in Jamaica during the summer of 2012 for initial writing and brainstorming, and at Dockside Studio in Louisiana for demos and capturing traditional Haitian drum loops that informed several tracks.[5][4] The process spanned 2012 into mid-2013, allowing the band to refine their live-oriented approach amid the challenges of coordinating a large ensemble.[4] The album was co-produced by Arcade Fire, James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem, and Markus Dravs, with engineering handled by Korey Richey and Mark Lawson.[13] Production emphasized live band performances to preserve energy, using 30-35 reels of 24-track analogue tape at 15 ips for the core recordings, which captured the group's full instrumentation in a single room despite issues like high microphone bleed and frequent instrument changes.[4] Live drums were tracked with a minimal setup—including an Audix D6 on the kick and Shure SM57 on the snare—to drive the album's disco-influenced rhythms, while electronic elements such as synths and field recordings were layered through extensive overdubs to build orchestral swells and textural depth.[4] One key challenge was integrating elements of Haitian rara music, achieved by incorporating vodou-inspired rhythmic drum loops recorded during the Louisiana sessions into tracks like "Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)," "It's Never Over (Hey Orpheus)," and "Afterlife."[5][4] Ensuring cohesion across the double album's 13 tracks also required careful balancing of the live foundation with these additions, as the band navigated the complexity of over 10 musicians contributing simultaneously.[4] Mixing was divided among several engineers, including Tom Elmhirst on six tracks, Craig Silvey on four, and James Murphy on two, completed at 24/96 in Pro Tools with analogue mastering to maintain sonic vibrancy.[14][4] Sessions concluded by mid-2013, paving the way for the album's October release.[7]Music and lyrics
Composition
Reflektor marks a stylistic shift for Arcade Fire toward disco-punk and new wave influences, departing from the orchestral indie rock of their earlier work. The double-LP album, spanning 13 tracks and 75 minutes, is structured across two discs: the first emphasizes upbeat, raw, and grounded energy with danceable rhythms, while the second adopts a more introspective, airier, and cosmic tone.[6][15] Instrumentation features prominent synthesizers, such as the Korg MS-20 for retro-luminosity effects, alongside brass sections including ghostly washes and Colin Stetson's bass saxophone, and layered percussion like congas, hand drums, and Haitian loops. Specific examples include the title track's driving cowbell and congas recorded hot for a synth-like pop, as well as "Flashbulb Eyes'" electronic pulses derived from distorted amplifier sounds, camera sample hi-hats, and dub-inspired delays. These elements contribute to the album's dense, claustrophobic sound with unpredictable electronic bursts and relentless disco pulses.[6][4][16] Song structures often incorporate extended intros, bridges with tempo shifts and abrupt changes, and choral harmonies, with tracks averaging 5-6 minutes in length. For instance, "Here Comes the Night Time" builds through kinetic Carnival beats and tempo variations, while "Flashbulb Eyes" features a bridge with delay effects, and "Joan of Arc" transitions from punk aggression to a glittery stomp. The official final track "Supersymmetry" extends over 11 minutes for a climactic close, while a short untitled hidden track (approximately 5 minutes) follows, incorporating tape rewind, a brass swell, synthesizers, and feedback.[6][16][4][17] The album fuses indie rock foundations with Haitian compas rhythms—evident in Caribbean-inspired percussion and voodoo-inflected grooves—and Europop elements, such as homages to France Gall's Eurovision style, all engineered to emphasize danceable, propulsive rhythms. This blend creates a "mash-up of Studio 54 and Haitian voodoo," prioritizing kinetic energy over previous anthemic builds.[15][6][16]Themes and influences
The album Reflektor explores themes of alienation in modern life, where individuals feel disconnected despite constant connectivity, as articulated in lyrics questioning whether people are truly friends in a hyper-linked world.[18] This sense of isolation is compounded by a tension between religion and secularism, drawing from Win Butler's observations of Haitian Vodou ceremonies versus Catholic services, where the former's rhythmic intensity highlights spiritual authenticity over institutionalized faith.[19] Identity emerges as a core concern, particularly in tracks addressing acceptance of marginalized experiences, with Butler emphasizing personal and universal struggles against societal norms.[12] Escapism through dance serves as a counterpoint, portraying nightlife and movement as liberatory forces amid disillusionment, as Régine Chassagne sought to infuse songs with a genuine, bodily rhythm inspired by her Haitian heritage.[11] Specific songs illustrate these themes vividly; for instance, "Afterlife" grapples with grief and the unknown beyond death, framed through the lens of love's endurance in loss.[20] Similarly, "Here Comes the Night Time" captures fear of the unfamiliar through the dual energy of a Haitian street party—celebratory yet edged with darkness—reflecting Butler's encounters in Port-au-Prince.[12] In "We Exist," the focus shifts to identity and visibility, critiquing how media and culture marginalize non-conforming lives, with lyrics urging recognition of those who "exist" outside mainstream narratives.[21] Cultural influences permeate the lyrics, including Haitian Vodou spirituality, evident in the rara drumming and ritualistic pulses that underscore themes of communal transcendence and resistance to colonial legacies like slavery.[19] Greek mythology provides another layer, particularly the Orpheus and Eurydice tale in "Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)," where the "awful sound" symbolizes the irreversible pull of grief and the underworld's silence, evoking existential separation.[20] Philosophically, the album draws from Søren Kierkegaard's Fear and Trembling, using the "reflektor" as a metaphor for distorted self-perception and the paralysis of endless reflection in a secular age, where faith and doubt intersect in human connections.[12] This existential undercurrent questions the shallowness of modern experience, with Butler's vocals delivering a tone of weary disillusionment that mirrors broader anxieties about authenticity amid superficiality.[22] The album's structure reinforces its thematic arc as a double LP: the first disc invites listeners to a metaphorical party of rhythmic escape and communal energy, while the second shifts to introspective reflection on loss and illusion, culminating in a journey toward clearer self-understanding through the "reflektor" motif.[12]Packaging
Artwork
The cover art for Reflektor features a black-and-white photograph of Auguste Rodin's 1893 marble sculpture Orpheus and Eurydice, sourced from The Metropolitan Museum of Art and depicting the mythological lovers in a tender yet tragic embrace as Orpheus attempts to lead Eurydice from the underworld.[23] This imagery symbolizes the album's central themes of love, death, and the tension between myth and modernity, drawing directly from the Greek legend where Orpheus's backward glance dooms his attempt to retrieve his wife.[24] The design was created by multidisciplinary artist Caroline Robert, a longtime collaborator with Arcade Fire who also handled photography for the project.[25] The inner artwork includes two foldout booklets containing lyrics alongside a series of photographs by Robert and Korey Richey, featuring stylized band portraits in poses that evoke ritualistic and performative elements, interspersed with symbolic motifs inspired by Haitian Vodou veve patterns—intricate ritual symbols used in spiritual ceremonies.[26][24] These visuals tie mythological narratives to the album's existential inquiries, blending ancient iconography with contemporary introspection. The packaging emphasizes thematic reflection through a gatefold sleeve for the double LP edition, with light-reflecting foil accents on the outer sleeve and printed inner sleeves, creating a shimmering, prismatic effect that mirrors the record's title and motifs of light and mirrors.[13] A dedicated lyrics booklet accompanies the release, incorporating additional reflective foil details to enhance the overall sensory experience of myth intersecting with modern club-like energy.[27] The band's direction for the visuals, in partnership with Robert, sought to fuse these elements into a cohesive aesthetic that underscores the album's exploration of spiritual rituals in a reflective, dance-oriented age.[28]Formats
Reflektor was initially released in several standard physical and digital formats. The album appeared as a double CD set in a gatefold sleeve, a double 180-gram vinyl LP in a gatefold jacket with reflective inner sleeves, and as a digital download in formats including MP3, FLAC, and AAC files.[29] A limited edition cassette version, titled The Reflektor Tapes, featured additional tracks from the deluxe edition and was produced as a companion release.[30] Special editions included a 2015 deluxe digital release adding five unreleased songs and a remix, available in high-quality AAC format.[31] In 2018, a reissue of the double vinyl LP was released on 180-gram vinyl.[32] Promotional materials such as stickers and posters were bundled with select physical copies, integrating elements of the album's reflective artwork design. The album was distributed by Sonovox Records in Canada and internationally, Merge Records in the United States, and various regional labels such as Universal Music Korea for other markets.[29] Standard audio specifications were 44.1 kHz/16-bit for CD and digital downloads, with high-resolution streaming options becoming available on platforms like Tidal shortly after the 2013 launch.[29]Release and promotion
Singles
The lead single from Reflektor was the title track, released digitally on September 9, 2013. Clocking in at 7:55, the song features pulsating disco influences and backing vocals by David Bowie, and its release was accompanied by two music videos: a traditional black-and-white clip directed by Anton Corbijn depicting the band in a stark room lit by a swinging reflector, and an interactive web-based version directed by Vincent Morisset that incorporates user-controlled puppetry elements and 3D effects.[33][34][35] The follow-up single, "Afterlife", arrived digitally on September 28, 2013, with a physical 12-inch vinyl edition following in December, including remixes by artists such as Flume. A lyric video featuring clips from the 1959 film Orfeu Negro was released on October 21, 2013, while the official music video, directed by Emily Kai Bock, premiered on November 21, 2013, and showcases a group of young men in a dreamlike, introspective journey through a field and warehouse setting.[36][37][38][39] Reflektor's third single, "We Exist", was issued on May 26, 2014. The accompanying music video, directed by David Wilson and released on May 16, 2014, stars actor Andrew Garfield as a transgender woman navigating societal rejection and transitioning into a fantastical performance at Coachella, explicitly addressing transgender identity and visibility.[40][41] The singles' promotion emphasized airplay on alternative rock radio, where "Reflektor" reached No. 28 on the Alternative Songs chart.[42]Marketing campaign
The marketing campaign for Arcade Fire's Reflektor commenced in August 2013 with a guerrilla-style teaser effort aimed at generating intrigue without direct confirmation from the band. Cryptic graffiti and posters emblazoned with the word "Reflektor," a mirrored disco ball emblem, and the date "9/9" appeared in major cities including New York, Montreal, and London, as well as at events like Lollapalooza in Chicago.[43][44] An anonymous Instagram account and short YouTube videos under the Reflektor banner further fueled speculation, presenting abstract imagery and audio snippets that hinted at a new project without revealing the band's involvement.[45][46] To heighten the mystery, Arcade Fire adopted the pseudonym "The Reflektors" for initial promotional activities, including a surprise performance at a small Montreal club on September 9, 2013—the same day as the lead single's release—where they debuted material from the album in costume to maintain anonymity.[47] This approach extended to additional unannounced shows in Brooklyn, Miami, and Los Angeles in October 2013, limited to a few hundred fans each and priced at $9, encouraging word-of-mouth buzz through indie music communities.[48][49] Visual elements were enhanced through collaboration with director Anton Corbijn, who helmed the stark black-and-white music video for the title track, featuring the band as oversized puppet figures in a surreal, high-contrast narrative that premiered on the official Reflektor site.[50][51] Complementing this, an interactive video titled "Just a Reflektor," co-developed with Google, allowed users to control visuals via smartphone motion or webcam input, integrating live camera feeds to simulate a participatory "reflection" experience tied to the album's themes.[52][53] The digital rollout emphasized organic engagement over traditional advertising, with the tracklist emerging via fan-shared screenshots from the band's website and social media hints in late September 2013, alongside exclusive streaming previews on platforms like Spotify to drive pre-orders.[54][55] Overall, the campaign adopted a low-budget, subversive strategy compared to major-label spectacles, prioritizing indie networks, limited-edition vinyl drops at select stores, and anti-digital themes in the content to foster genuine fan anticipation.[56][57]Tour
The Reflektor Tour was Arcade Fire's extensive world tour supporting their fourth studio album Reflektor, running from October 2013 to August 2014 and comprising over 100 performances across North America, Europe, and Australia.[58] It commenced with intimate promotional warehouse shows in late October 2013, including secretive events in Brooklyn on October 19 and Montreal on October 27, just before and after the album's October 28 release, where attendees were encouraged to dress in formal or costume attire to evoke a festive, reflective atmosphere.[59] These initial gigs featured a central disco ball and strobe lighting, setting a tone of communal dancing and mystery aligned with the album's themes.[60] The tour's primary arena phase launched on March 6, 2014, at the KFC Yum! Center in Louisville, Kentucky, as a Live Nation-produced run initially announced with 28 North American dates extending through August.[61] Additional legs followed, including a European stretch in June and July—highlighted by multiple nights at London's Earls Court—and an Australian tour in October and November, culminating in a homecoming show in Montreal on August 30, 2014, that wrapped the tour.[62] Openers varied by leg, such as Dan Deacon and Kid Koala for North America, contributing to the tour's eclectic, high-energy vibe. The band's core touring lineup remained consistent, featuring Win Butler, Régine Chassagne, Will Butler, Tim Kingsbury, Jeremy Gara, and multi-instrumentalist Richard Reed Parry, who had become a full-time member since the band's earlier albums.[63] Stage design emphasized theatrical immersion, with a central in-the-round setup allowing 360-degree audience access and transforming arenas into dance halls.[64] Key elements included a massive disco ball suspended above the stage, strings of light bulbs dangling from the rafters, and elaborate lighting rigs that pulsed in sync with the music to foster a sense of collective movement.[65] Shows typically opened with a pre-recorded or surrogate performance by papier-mâché caricature figures representing the band, accompanied by a dancer in a mirrored suit who engaged the crowd, building tension before the full ensemble emerged to launch into "Reflektor."[66] Puppeteers and visual projections added layers of storytelling, drawing from the album's existential motifs and enhancing the live spectacle's otherworldly quality.[67] Notable performances included headlining Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival on April 13 and 20, 2014, where the band closed the event with an expanded set blending Reflektor tracks and older material amid pyrotechnics and guest appearances.[68] Other festival slots, such as Osheaga in Montreal and Lollapalooza in Chicago, showcased the tour's scalability from arenas to outdoor venues. Encores often featured regional covers to connect with local audiences, including Prince's "Controversy" (with Win Butler donning a TV-headed costume displaying Prince's face) and ABBA's "Dancing Queen," alongside tributes to artists like the Ramones and Neil Young, performed with raw energy to cap two-hour sets.[69] The grueling schedule, with frequent travel and high production demands, led to exhaustion for band members, prompting built-in breaks like the April pause for Coachella and recovery periods between legs.[70]Release
Reflektor was released internationally on October 28, 2013, and in the United States the following day on October 29.[71][7] The album appeared under Merge Records in the US and Sonovox Records in Canada, with cooperative distribution deals through partners like Capitol Records and Universal Music Group handling international markets.[72][57][73] To mark the launch, Arcade Fire organized listening parties in Montreal and New York, allowing select fans and media early access to the full album in intimate settings.[74][75] The band opted against a traditional album release concert, instead transitioning directly into the initial legs of their Reflektor Tour with smaller venue performances under the pseudonym the Reflektors shortly after the drop.[76][77] A deluxe edition reissue was released digitally on September 25, 2015, featuring five unreleased tracks including "Get Right" and a remix of "Afterlife" by Flume, along with a documentary film The Reflektor Tapes.[31] Physical copies were available via pre-orders bundled with merchandise and exclusive items through the band's official store and label sites, while digital versions launched day-and-date on streaming platforms including iTunes and Spotify.[3][78]Reception
Critical reception
Reflektor received generally favorable reviews from music critics upon its release in 2013. According to aggregate site Metacritic, the album earned a score of 80 out of 100 based on 48 reviews, reflecting "generally favorable" reviews with 42 positive and 6 mixed assessments.[79] Reviewers frequently praised its ambition, infectious energy, and bold stylistic shifts toward disco and electronic elements, while some noted criticisms regarding its extended runtime and perceived pretension. NME awarded Reflektor 8 out of 10, commending Arcade Fire's reinvention of their sound through pulsating disco rhythms and calling it a "daring" evolution that twisted the band's signature urgency into new shapes.[80] Pitchfork rated it 9.2 out of 10—designating it "Best New Music"—for its lush, 85-minute scope as an anxious triumph blending rock skepticism with kinetic grooves, though it pointed to an uneven second disc and occasional lyrical heavy-handedness in tracks like "Porno."[6] Rolling Stone gave it 4.5 out of 5 stars (equivalent to 90/100), hailing the Haitian-inspired fusion of post-punk drive and producer James Murphy's modern-dance flair as the band's strongest work yet, a "jarring, charging union" evoking Studio 54's hedonism alongside deeper emotional currents.[81] A recurring theme across reviews was acclaim for James Murphy's production, which infused the record with propulsive basslines, layered backing vocals, and rhythmic vitality drawn from Haitian rara traditions, elevating Arcade Fire's orchestral tendencies into danceable territory.[6][81] Critics also debated the album's accessibility relative to the band's prior rock-focused efforts like The Suburbs, with some viewing the pivot to upbeat, synth-driven tracks as liberating and others as overly ambitious or self-indulgent. The double-disc length drew particular scrutiny, often cited as contributing to filler material and a sense of overreach despite standout moments of communal euphoria.[79] Initial critical reactions were robustly positive within indie and alternative media, which embraced the album's experimental verve and thematic depth on isolation and mythology, positioning it as a thrilling risk post-Grammy success. Mainstream outlets, however, delivered more mixed verdicts, with outliers like The Washington Post decrying its lack of wit and subtlety amid bongo-heavy bombast, underscoring tensions around the band's shift from introspective rock to global-dance spectacle.[82]Accolades
Reflektor garnered significant industry recognition, earning multiple awards and nominations that underscored Arcade Fire's artistic achievement and international appeal. The album and its associated works received numerous nominations and secured three wins across major ceremonies.[83][84] At the 2014 Juno Awards, Reflektor won Album of the Year and Alternative Album of the Year.[85][86] The band received six nominations in total, including Group of the Year, Producer of the Year (credited to the band and James Murphy), and Songwriter of the Year.[87] For the 57th Annual Grammy Awards in 2015, Reflektor was nominated for Best Alternative Music Album.[88] The single "We Exist" earned a nomination for Best Music Video.[89] Reflektor was shortlisted for the 2014 Polaris Music Prize, placing it among Canada's top albums based on artistic merit.[90] The title track "Reflektor" was nominated for Best Track at the 2014 NME Awards.[91] Additionally, the "Reflektor" music video won Best Art Direction at the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards.[92]Commercial performance
Sales
Reflektor achieved strong initial sales upon its release, moving 140,000 copies in the United States during its first week and debuting at number one on the Billboard 200 chart.[93] In Canada, it sold 49,344 units in the same period, also reaching the top of the national albums chart.[94] By December 2014, the album had sold 367,000 copies in the United States.[95] Revenue streams extended beyond album purchases to include singles and licensing, notably the band's original score for the 2013 film Her, co-composed with Owen Pallett, which has accumulated over 105 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.[96] Post-2014, physical album sales declined amid the industry's shift to digital formats and streaming, though this was mitigated by a vinyl reissue in 2018 that sustained collector interest.[29] The album experienced a streaming resurgence, surpassing 424 million plays on Spotify as of November 2025.[96] The accompanying Reflektor Tour provided substantial supplementary revenue through live performances and merchandise.Charts
Reflektor debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 in the United States, selling 140,000 copies in its first week and marking Arcade Fire's first chart-topping album there. The album also topped the Canadian Albums Chart with 49,344 units sold in its debut week and reached number one on the UK Albums Chart, becoming the band's first number-one release in the United Kingdom. In Australia, it peaked at number three on the ARIA Albums Chart. Overall, Reflektor entered the top ten in more than 20 countries, including Ireland, Belgium, and the Netherlands. The album demonstrated significant longevity, spending over 50 weeks on the Billboard 200 and re-entering the chart multiple times in subsequent years. Its enduring appeal extended into the streaming era, with the title track accumulating nearly 87 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.| Chart (2013) | Peak Position | Weeks on Chart |
|---|---|---|
| US Billboard 200 | 1 | 51 |
| Canada (Nielsen SoundScan) | 1 | — |
| UK Albums (OCC) | 1 | 20 |
| Australia (ARIA) | 3 | 15 |
Certifications
Reflektor has been certified for sales by several international music organizations, reflecting its commercial success in key markets. In the United States, the album was certified Gold by the RIAA in 2014 for 500,000 units shipped, including equivalent album units.[97] In Canada, Music Canada awarded it Platinum certification in 2013 for 80,000 units, later upgrading it to Quadruple Platinum for 320,000 units as of May 2025.[98] The album also received Gold certifications in the United Kingdom from the BPI in 2014 for 100,000 units, in France from SNEP for 50,000 units, and in Australia from ARIA for 35,000 units.| Country | Organization | Certification | Units | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United States | RIAA | Gold | 500,000 | 2014 |
| Canada | Music Canada | Quadruple Platinum | 320,000 | 2025 |
| United Kingdom | BPI | Gold | 100,000 | 2014 |
| France | SNEP | Gold | 50,000 | 2014 |
| Australia | ARIA | Gold | 35,000 | 2014 |
Track listing
Reflektor is a double album, with the first seven tracks comprising the first disc and the remaining six tracks the second disc. All tracks are written by the Arcade Fire, except where noted.[100]Disc one
{| class="wikitable" !No. !Title| !Length |
|---|
| 1. |
| "Reflektor" (writers: Arcade Fire, James Murphy) |
| 7:33 |
| - |
| 2. |
| "We Exist" |
| 5:44 |
| - |
| 3. |
| "Flashbulb Eyes" |
| 2:42 |
| - |
| 4. |
| "Here Comes the Night Time" |
| 6:26 |
| - |
| 5. |
| "Normal Person" |
| 4:26 |
| - |
| 6. |
| "You Already Know" |
| 3:58 |
| - |
| 7. |
| "Joan of Arc" |
| 5:35 |
| - |
| !Total length: |
| 36:24 |
| } |
Disc two
{| class="wikitable" !No. !Title| !Length |
|---|
| 8. |
| "Here Comes the Night Time II" |
| 2:54 |
| - |
| 9. |
| "Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)" (writers: Arcade Fire, James Murphy, Markus Dravs) |
| 6:15 |
| - |
| 10. |
| "It's Never Over (Oh Orpheus)" (writers: Arcade Fire, James Murphy, Markus Dravs) |
| 6:15 |
| - |
| 11. |
| "Porno" |
| 7:08 |
| - |
| 12. |
| "Afterlife" |
| 5:43 |
| - |
| 13. |
| "Supersymmetry" |
| 11:01 |
| - |
| !Total length: |
| 39:16 |
| } |
Personnel
Arcade Fire
The core members of Arcade Fire who contributed to their 2013 album Reflektor formed the band's foundational lineup, handling primary vocals, instrumentation, and production duties. Led by Win Butler and Régine Chassagne, the group drew on their established collaborative dynamic to shape the album's eclectic sound, blending rock, electronic, and orchestral elements.[101][29]- Win Butler (vocals, guitar, piano, production): As the band's frontman and primary songwriter, Butler provided lead vocals across the album and played guitar and piano on multiple tracks, while co-producing the record with external collaborators.[101][29]
- Régine Chassagne (vocals, accordion, keys, hurdy-gurdy, production): Chassagne contributed lead and backing vocals, as well as performances on accordion, keyboards, and hurdy-gurdy—most notably on tracks like "Here Comes the Night Time"—and co-produced the album.[101][29][4]
- Richard Reed Parry (guitar, keyboards, backing vocals): Parry handled guitar and keyboard parts, providing textural depth, and delivered backing vocals to support the album's layered harmonies.[101][29]
- William Butler (bass, guitar, keys, percussion): Butler, who left the band in 2022 after contributing to Arcade Fire's work through their 2022 album WE, played bass, guitar, keyboards, and percussion on Reflektor, enhancing its rhythmic and synth-driven elements.[101][29]
- Tim Kingsbury (guitar, bass): Kingsbury focused on guitar and bass lines, contributing to the album's foundational groove and indie rock backbone.[101][29]
- Jeremy Gara (drums): Gara provided the drumming and percussion, driving the album's energetic and dance-oriented rhythms.[101][29]
Additional musicians
James Murphy of LCD Soundsystem contributed synthesizers and programming to multiple tracks on Reflektor, including the title track, and provided backing vocals on "Reflektor".[4][29] The Haitian rara ensemble performed on "Here Comes the Night Time" and "Awful Sound (Oh Eurydice)", incorporating traditional rhythmic elements inspired by Arcade Fire's experiences in Haiti.[29][102] Owen Pallett arranged and performed strings throughout the album, adding orchestral depth to several compositions.[29] Will Johnson provided vocals and percussion.[29] David Bowie supplied brief backing vocals on "Reflektor", a contribution confirmed by the artist himself via his official Facebook page.[103]- Sarah Neufeld (violin)
- Lætitia Sadier (backing vocals on "We Exist")
- Colin Stetson (saxophone, horn arrangements)