Plasticine

Album: Automatic (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • Plasticine is a type of modeling clay and is also the title of this track from The Lumineers' fifth studio album. Frontman Wesley Schultz sings from the perspective of a performer who's willing to shape himself into any form that will guarantee him success. Not only can he look the part, but he's confident he can say all the right things with a team of writers at his disposal. On the band's TikTok account, Schultz explained how the song is about the lack of substance from people who value ambition over authenticity in the music industry.

    "The song talks about teams of writers feeding you the words and teleprompters telling you what to say. I think you see it a lot in cities like Nashville, where there's just a lot of ambition, and it's almost unbridled to the point of like, what do you stand for? Do you really want this to matter in 50 or 100 years?"
  • The song is a warning to fame seekers: If you're willing to do anything, you'll end up with nothing. "If you're doing everything in your power just to get bigger, to be more famous, you're the easiest target to be taken advantage of," Schultz told The Sun in 2025. "It means the industry will take whatever it can from you and drop you the minute you're no longer of use."
  • The instrumental break after the chorus samples dialogue from the romantic comedy When Harry Met Sally when Billy Crystal rambles to Meg Ryan about his confusion over the meaning of "Auld Lang Syne."

    The band's creative director, Nick Bell, suggested the scene when Schultz and drummer Jeremiah Fraites told him their idea of juxtaposing talking against the music. According to Fraites, Crystal's bewildered analysis of the New Year's tune added an interesting layer to "Plasticine." He said, "It sort of became this meta, double-entendre thing about, what is the song Plasticine about? What is any song about?"
  • The Lumineers reunited with their Brightside (2022) producer, David Baron, at his Utopia recording studio in Woodstock, New York. To generate a raw feel on the tracks, the band performed together in a live room, limiting their ability to fix mistakes. They also arrived at the studio with ideas instead of demos. Schultz said, "For this album, we didn't do many demos, aside from very rudimentary sketches. We just relied on gut instinct."
  • This is one of many tunes in the Lumineers' catalog that follows a musician trying to find his place in the world. Disguised as a love song, their first hit, "Ho Hey," is about the band's pre-fame struggle to hold onto their dream, while "Same Old Song," the lead single from Automatic, is another story about a discouraged songwriter trying to break ground in Los Angeles.

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