Lemonade

Album: How Did I Get Here? (2025)
Charted: 89
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Songfacts®:

  • "Lemonade" is a funk-inspired song where Louis Tomlinson takes one of life's simplest refreshments and turns it into a full-bodied metaphor for an intoxicating, unpredictable lover: sweet one minute, bitter the next, and altogether hard to put down. Where Beyoncé once made lemonade a symbol of resilience and revenge, and Internet Money spun it into a trap anthem about excess, Tomlinson finds a middle road: fizzy desire with a twist of surrender.
  • Tomlinson co-wrote the track with Theo Hutchcraft of Hurts, Scottish songwriter David Sneddon, and German producer Nicolas Rebscher. Hutchcraft and Sneddon were already in Tomlinson's address book thanks to their "Silver Tongues" collaboration, while Rebscher helped him channel his more jagged edge on "Out of My System." Here, the four aimed for something "big and fun," a dance-rock concoction that you can imagine echoing off a Caribbean shoreline.
  • The song was written during a Costa Rica retreat, where Tomlinson went in search of hippie-ish inspiration and came back with a whole record, How Did I Get Here? Released as its lead single, "Lemonade" sets the tone for a breezy album shaped by sun, surf, and the occasional hammock. As Tomlinson told Rolling Stone, "I don't think songs like 'Lemonade,' 'Sunflowers,' and 'Lazy' would have happened without Costa Rica."
  • Tomlinson was photographed with his girlfriend, television personality Zara McDermott, at Banana Beach in Costa Rica in June 2025. He hasn't confirmed whether she's the song's muse, but the timing and theme have only fueled speculation. After all, much like the drink itself, romance can be both refreshing and tart, depending on who's pouring.
  • The video leans hard into surreal, sun-drenched dream imagery. It opens with Tomlinson laboring through a photoshoot under blistering heat before drifting into a fevered hallucination where he encounters figures in yellow bodysuits, a sock-puppet lemonade stand, and a lemon farm bathed in unreal light, all mirroring the song's citrus symbolism. The video was directed by photographer and frequent The 1975 visual collaborator Samuel Bradley.

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