On With the Show

Album: Woman of Faces (2025)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "On With The Show" is about putting on a brave face in a time of emotional loss. Celeste's focus is on carrying on and reclaiming identity after her heartbreak.

    Celeste said the song is about "this feeling of needing to trudge on through heavier feelings, knowing you have another purpose that's attached to something bigger than yourself, so you willingly go towards it and sacrifice your sense of wellbeing."
  • After a breakup that left Celeste adrift, the singer was in no mood to go into the studio. "When you lose the person from your life that you really love, there's a grief that comes over you," she told The Guardian. "I didn't really feel like I actually wanted to live at that point. I didn't find meaning and purpose in the music."

    All she had was the title "On With The Show," which she shared with her frequent collaborator, English singer-songwriter Matt Maltese. He didn't need much more. The two had already built a creative shorthand after working together on songs like "To Love A Man," and Maltese knew right away what the song needed to be.
  • Celeste took inspiration from Marius Petipa's 1898 classical ballet Raymonda, which she had recently seen. "It's about a woman in the Crimean war and she has two lovers: one is in Russia and one is in Crimea," she said. "I could relate, because she was torn between these two entities: at that point, my dedication to music and my dedication to a person. And one was taking the energy from the other. So On With the Show was about me having to find the courage to let go of something, to meet back in with the path of my life as a singer."
  • "On With The Show" uses the metaphor of a show or performance to explore themes of resilience and facing adversity. Celeste isn't the first to equate life's struggles with the theater. Leo Sayer's "The Show Must Go On" twisted the cliché by adopting clown imagery and refusing to keep the performance alive, turning the spotlight on exhaustion instead of endurance. In contrast, Queen's song, also titled "The Show Must Go On," written as Freddie Mercury battled terminal illness, became an anthem of defiance, his soaring vocals transforming the stage-as-life metaphor into one of rock's greatest testaments to perseverance.
  • Production was handled by Jeff Bhasker and Beach Noise. Bhasker's resumé includes Kanye West's 808s & Heartbreak and My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy albums, Fun's "We Are Young" and Mark Ronson's "Uptown Funk." Beach Noise are best known for their work with Kendrick Lamar and their production on Celeste's 2024 track "This Is Who I Am."
  • The Rodrigo Inada-directed video drives the metaphor home. Celeste appears as a showgirl caught in a surreal cabaret, donning masks and shedding them as she grapples with identity, performance, and the weight of expectation.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Gary LeVox

Gary LeVoxSongwriter Interviews

On "Life Is A Highway," his burgeoning solo career, and the Rascal Flatts song he most connects with.

Jay, Peaches, Spinderella and other Darrining Victims

Jay, Peaches, Spinderella and other Darrining VictimsSong Writing

Just like Darrin was replaced on Bewitched, groups have swapped out original members, hoping we wouldn't notice.

Danny Kortchmar

Danny KortchmarSongwriter Interviews

Danny played guitar on Sweet Baby James, Tapestry, and Running On Empty. He also co-wrote many hit songs, including "Dirty Laundry," "Sunset Grill" and "Tender Is The Night."

Adam Duritz of Counting Crows

Adam Duritz of Counting CrowsSongwriter Interviews

"Mr. Jones" took on new meaning when the song about a misguided view of fame made Adam famous.

David Paich of Toto

David Paich of TotoSongwriter Interviews

Toto's keyboard player explains the true meaning of "Africa" and talks about working on the Thriller album.

Judas Priest

Judas PriestSongwriter Interviews

Rob Halford, Richie Faulkner and Glenn Tipton talk twin guitar harmonies and explain how they create songs in Judas Priest.