Click Clack Symphony
by Raye (featuring Hans Zimmer)

Album: This Music May Contain Hope (2026)
Charted: 11 102
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Songfacts®:

  • "Click Clack Symphony" is what happens when Raye takes a sound most people associate with hurrying across a pavement in mild discomfort and elevates it into something approaching a life philosophy. High heels, in her telling, are not merely footwear, but percussion instruments, emotional support systems, and, in moments of crisis, a sort of emergency rescue service with better outfits.

    "The song is about the sounds that high heels make," Raye explained. "It's about those times in our life when you need your best friends or your siblings to drag you out of the house and say, 'I know you're not in the best place right now but we need to get outside.' Thank goodness for those people in our lives that help us in our dark times."
  • The song opens with a spoken-word musing on the statistically absurd miracle of being alive. The odds of being born on this Earth, Raye notes, are one in 400 trillion, which makes it all the more galling that so many of us spend this improbable existence at home hunched over our phones. It's a theme Raye previously explored on her 2024 track "Genesis," where sunsets go unwatched because someone, somewhere, is doing something more interesting on Instagram. Here, the frustration is sharper: she has beaten astronomical odds yet cannot quite conquer leaving the house.
  • The recurring "click-clack" percussion heard throughout the track represents the sound of multiple pairs of high-heeled shoes strutting down the pavement, transforming an everyday sound into a figurative symphony of solidarity and forward motion.

    There's a neat bit of continuity with "Escapism," Raye's 2022 breakthrough, in which she sings on the pre-chorus:

    Just a heart broke bitch, high heels, six inch
    In the back of the nightclub, sippin' champagne


    In that song they're part of a rather more numbed, champagne-fueled coping mechanism. In "Click Clack Symphony" the same ritual is repurposed. The heels are no longer just armor; they're instruments in a shared march forward.
  • Raye wrote and composed the song with Hans Zimmer, her regular producer Mike Sabath, Hendric Buenck, Russell Emanuel, and Billie Ray Fingers. It was recorded with the Nashville Music Scoring Orchestra.

    German composer and producer Hans Zimmer is known for his work on the soundtracks of many blockbuster films, including Interstellar, Dune, Gladiator and The Lion King.

    Bleeding Fingers Music is Zimmer's Los Angeles-based company specializing in orchestral and cinematic music, and Buenck and Emanuel are among its core composers, known for their TV and film scoring.
  • This is Raye and Hans Zimmer's second collaboration. Their first was "Mother Nature," released in October 2023 for Sir David Attenborough's BBC nature docuseries Planet Earth III, which also features background vocals from Bastille frontman Dan Smith.
  • "Click Clack Symphony" is track 6 on Raye's 17-track album This Music May Contain Hope. The album is structured around four "seasons" of her emotional life, with "Click Clack Symphony" sitting in the winter portion of the album - the coldest, most introspective chapter.

    The song itself is divided into four lyrical sections, each containing a repetition of the chorus, mirroring the classical symphonic structure of four movements, distinct in tempo and theme, but bound together by recurring elements.
  • The music video was directed by Dave Meyers, one of the most celebrated directors in pop music, known for his work with Kendrick Lamar, Taylor Swift, and Pink. The visual leans into the song's cinematic grandeur, portraying Raye and a group of women marching forward together, a literal translation of the song's message of female solidarity and resilience.
  • The text Raye sent to Hans Zimmer read: "Hi. This is a very rough demo of a song I want to make for my album. I was wondering if you'd like to work on it with me? No worries if you don't feel a connection to it." Once Zimmer signed on, the process was transformative. "We went back and forth," Raye told Apple Music. "One orchestra and a lot of hours later, we created something together. It's long, which I love, and unapologetically cinematic."

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