Dancing In The Flames

Album: released as a single (2024)
Charted: 12 14
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Songfacts®:

  • "Dancing In The Flames" weaves together themes of love, risk, and a good dose of chaos. The Weekend details a wild late-night car ride with imagery of driving, crashing, and flames serving as metaphors for a passionate, borderline-destructive relationship. It's not so much a celebration of love as it is an acknowledgment that sometimes it's the chaos that keeps the fire burning.
  • The Weeknd wrote and produced the song with his longtime Swedish collaborators, Oscar Holter and Max Martin. They contributed to five tracks from After Hours (including the mega hit "Blinding Lights") and a solid chunk of his Dawn FM album. For "Dancing in the Flames," they cooked up an '80s-inspired sound complete with shimmering synths and booming drums that will feel like déjà vu to anyone who's ever tapped their foot to one of The Weeknd's earlier hits.
  • The song was first teased on September 7, 2024, during The Weeknd's one-night-only show in São Paulo, Brazil, where fans got a taste of this track and others from his sixth album, Hurry Up Tomorrow.
  • The accompanying music video, directed by Anton Tammi, is filled with all the drama we've come to expect. We see the singer cruising down a rain-soaked road when, in true Weeknd fashion, he crashes his car and gets launched into the night. He sees a massive orange light in the sky and starts sprinting toward it. Spoiler: It turns out to be the lights of an oncoming ambulance, and before we know it, the video fades to black.
  • The video was shot on a then-unreleased iPhone 16 Pro. Erik Henrikkson, the director of photography, couldn't stop gushing about how the phone handled the tricky visuals.

    "We were shooting with really bright HDMI backlights hitting the rain," he said, "and I was genuinely worried about how the iPhone would manage the contrast, how it would capture The Weeknd's face in all that chaos."

    Needless to say, Henrikkson was blown away by the results.
  • This isn't The Weeknd's first time driving headlong into metaphors about fast cars and bad decisions. His discography is practically littered with them, including:

    "The Hills" (2015)
    The video sees The Weeknd wake up after a car crash before emerging, bleeding, from an upside-down door.

    "Blinding Lights" (2019)
    This hit song features lyrics about driving fast through neon-drenched streets, with the music video showing The Weeknd speeding through the city.

    "Gasoline" (2022)
    The "Gasoline" video begins with The Weeknd crashing his car into a "DO NOT ENTER" signpost

    The man has a thing for reckless driving, and in "Dancing in the Flames," he's back at it, singing about "crashing when we're switching lanes" - a poetic way of saying that love, for him, often teeters on the edge of destruction.

    In a way, this recurring motif - racing, crashing, and burning - has become The Weeknd's signature. It's his way of exploring life's dangerous side, wrapping it all up in sleek production and a catchy hook.

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