Apple

Album: Brat (2024)
Charted: 8 51
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Songfacts®:

  • Here, Charli XCX takes us on an introspective journey through her relationship with her parents. She uses the humble apple as an analogy for inherited traits, both endearing and exasperating.

    I guess the apple don't fall far from the tree
    'Cause I've been looking at you so long
    Now I only see me


    Charli utilizes the timeworn adage, "The apple doesn't fall far from the tree," as a jumping-off point to explore her relationship with her folks. She acknowledges that no matter how far we might roam, the familial imprint remains indelible.
  • Delving deeper, Charli touches on the concept of intergenerational trauma - the emotional and psychological echoes of past wounds that reverberate through the family line. With her mixed-race heritage (a Gujarati Indian mother born in Uganda and a Scottish father), Charli is all too familiar with the heavy legacy of historical upheavals. In 1972, Idi Amin's expulsion of the Indian population from Uganda left indelible marks on countless families, sowing seeds of poverty, internalized trauma, and an ever-present fear for safety. This trauma, compounded by the racism encountered both in Africa and the UK, has undoubtedly woven itself into the fabric of Charli's lineage.

    I wanna know where you go
    When you're feeling alone
    When you're feeling alone, do you?


    The lyric taps into a talking point within mixed-race communities: the quest for a sense of home. It's a question that lingers like a distant melody, particularly for those straddling multiple cultural identities.
  • Charli has a recurring theme in her music: driving. Tracks like "Vroom Vroom," "White Mercedes," "Crash," and "Speed Drive" are imbued with the restless energy of the open road.

    I split the apple down symmetrical lines
    And what I find is kinda scary
    Makes me just wanna drive
    Drive, drive, drive, dr-dr-dr-drive, drive, drive


    In "Apple," getting behind the wheel is her escape hatch. Charli splits open this metaphorical apple, sees what's inside, and decides the best course of action is to hit the gas and get the heck outta there.
  • Charli XCX wrote "Apple" with:

    Her fiancé, George Daniel, who is the drummer of The 1975. The pair got married in 2025.

    Canadian songwriter and producer Linus Wiklund, also known as LotusIV, and Swedish singer-songwriter Noonie Bao. LotusIV and Bao regularly team up; their other credits include Zedd's "Stay" and "Happy Now," and Rita Ora's "Let You Love Me."
  • Charli XCX recorded "Apple" for Brat, a 15-track album incorporating a club sound reminiscent of the illegal London rave scene where she started performing in her early teens. "Apple" is more melodic than the other tunes on the record.

    "Obviously, that track is a little bit sonically different than the rest of the songs on the record and, at first, I was nervous about that," she said. "But then it kind of felt, actually, that that is sort of the epitome of brat in a way: to kind of throw something unbelievably unexpected just right in your face and, you know, let it thrive."
  • Charli co-produced "Apple" with Daniel, LotusIV, and her longtime collaborator, A.G. Cook. It marks her second official co-production credit, following "In The City" featuring Sam Smith.
  • The song became a viral hit thanks to a multi-step dance routine on TikTok.

    Kelley Heyer, a New York-based actor and content creator, invented the dance on a whim and captured it all on camera. "The rhythm in Apple made me want to dance in a certain way," she told The Guardian. "I basically woke up, stood in front of a mirror and took everything from the lyrics."

    "It's a song about generational trauma, and I turned it into a TikTok dance," Heyer added. "When she sings, 'I think the apple's rotten right to the core,' musically, the phrase has this oozing quality, which makes you want to touch your body."

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