logo
Lorde's ‘Green Light' Is the Soundtrack of Youth

Lorde's ‘Green Light' Is the Soundtrack of Youth

Elle23-06-2025
John Proctor Is the Villain, one of the most talked-about new plays on Broadway, follows a small-town high school class studying The Crucible at the beginning of the #MeToo movement. One of its most memorable—and cathartic—moments is set to the song 'Green Light,' Lorde's lead single on her acclaimed 2017 record, Melodrama . As we kick off a weeklong celebration of the singer in anticipation of her upcoming album release , Kimberly Belflower, the playwright behind John Proctor , reflects on the significance of 'Green Light' and why it serves as a quintessential coming-of-age anthem — especially for young women.
When the pre-chorus of 'Green Light' hits, the world changes.
At first, Lorde's transcendent single from her sophomore album details the pain of a relationship ending in all its jagged edges. She uses a minor key and rebels against traditional rhyme structure to prioritize emotional truth over expectation or order: 'I know about what you did, and I wanna scream the truth / She thinks you love the beach, you're such a damn liar.' When you're in the middle of pain, there is no order to it. There is no reason. The first time my heart was broken, it felt like my life changed color. The wreckage seemed to have no end. Familiar places felt foreign. I didn't recognize the landscape of my own heart.
Somehow, though, time passes. Slowly, strangely, but it passes. The pain doesn't leave, at least not entirely. But pain is a path, and it leads somewhere new. It crystallizes into different shapes. And then: the pre-chorus. The shift from minor to major. 'But I hear sounds in my mind / brand new sounds in my mind.' In this single moment of 'Green Light,' Lorde captures the feeling of transformation. Within the first 48 seconds of the song, she takes us on a journey from the lows of an ending to the highs of creation, moving into a beat that makes even the most hardened heart soar.
The creation I speak of is that of being an artist, but also that of being a person. As an artist, I know the particular feeling of moving through pain and arriving at the moment of hearing 'brand new sounds.' There were pains inflicted long ago that I carry still, that I'll carry forever; pains that will always be tender to the touch. ('Honey, I'll be seein' you 'ever I go.') But that pain gave me new tools, new experiences, new modes of expression that I channel into my work. I wouldn't be the artist I am without the pain I've survived. I wouldn't be able to hear or harness those 'brand new sounds.' In a single sonic moment, Lorde gave voice to an alchemy I've never been able to put into words.
View full post on Youtube
But you don't have to think of yourself as an artist to be a creator. We all create our identities, our directions through life. We all know that 'brand new sounds' feeling. At a certain point, we each cross the bridge of a specific pain into new territory. And it usually happens for the first time, as so many things do, when we're teenagers. 'In a single sonic moment, Lorde gave voice to an alchemy I've never been able to put into words.'
'Green Light' was released when Lorde was 20 years old and is the first song on her masterpiece Melodrama . In the last song of the same album, she sings, 'I'm 19, and I'm on fire.' It's no coincidence that 'brand new sounds' came from a teenage brain. Everything is brand-new in those years. Everything feels extreme. Sometimes there are multiple opposing extremes in a single moment. As Lorde herself described 'Green Light' in a 2017 interview with Zane Lowe : 'It sounds so happy, and then the lyrics are so intense, obviously. And I realized, I was like, 'How come this thing is coming out so joyous sounding?' And I realized this is that drunk girl at the party, dancing around crying about her ex-boyfriend who everyone thinks is a mess. That's her tonight, and tomorrow she starts to rebuild.' What If Lorde Was One of Us
The reason I was asked to write this piece is because I wrote a play called John Proctor Is the Villain , now on Broadway through August 31. The play centers around a high school English class in rural Georgia studying Arthur Miller's The Crucible in the wake of the early #MeToo movement. The play also (spoiler alert!) ends with two teenage girls performing a choreographed dance to 'Green Light.' Julieta Cervantes
Sadie Sink and Amalia Yoo dancing to 'Green Light' in John Proctor Is the Villain
I knew from the start that the play should end with a dance sequence that doubles as an act of rebellion. This calls back to the girls in The Crucible dancing and casting spells in the woods, but it's also a way for the girls in my play to reclaim their own bodies, process their trauma, and cultivate joy in the face of a world that has never valued them and doesn't take care of them. It's sleepover dances in your best friend's basement meets ancient witchcraft meets demonic possession. I never had to think about what the soundtrack of the play's ending should be. It was always 'Green Light.' These girls have walked the path of their pain, and it led them here: harnessing their hurt and turning it into magic, into art. 'Teenage girls, in all their big feelings and extremes, are terrifying to people who aren't teenage girls.'
There's a stage direction in the play's final sequence that reads, 'It starts to look less like a dance and more like an exorcism,' which I wrote from what I feel watching Lorde perform. In the 'Green Light' music video, and in her many live performances of the song, she thrashes. She shakes. She jumps. She's wild, and a little scary. She's not dancing for other people's (namely: men's) consumption of her body; she's dancing as a mode of pure self-expression. Dance as bodily autonomy. Dance as sacred ritual. Dance as spell. Neil Lupin // Getty Images
Lorde during her Melodrama World Tour.
Right before 'brand new sounds,' Lorde asks: 'Did it frighten you? / How we kissed when we danced on the light-up floor?' And the answer is almost definitely 'yes.' Yes, whatever kinds of kissing and dancing that happened with Lorde on the light-up floor absolutely frightened this unnamed person. Teenage girls, in all their big feelings and extremes, are terrifying to people who aren't teenage girls. Throughout 'Green Light,' Lorde invokes that ferocity in her imagery: teeth that bite and screaming truths.
I've been 'that drunk girl at the party dancing around crying about her ex-boyfriend,' trying to untangle and scream my own truths. I did rebuild. And let me tell you: I needed to dance that dance to know how.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Lewis Capaldi and Lorde top UK charts after Glastonbury performances
Lewis Capaldi and Lorde top UK charts after Glastonbury performances

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Lewis Capaldi and Lorde top UK charts after Glastonbury performances

Singers Lewis Capaldi and Lorde have topped the UK charts after their performances at Glastonbury, the Official Charts Company said. Alternative pop star Lorde's new record Virgin reached number one on the album chart after she performed all 11 tracks at a secret set at the Woodsies stage on Saturday. Scottish singer Capaldi also made an emotional return to the Somerset festival last weekend, performing his new song Survive which has since gone to number one on the singles chart. Capaldi performed a 35-minute set at the Pyramid stage, two years after struggling to manage his Tourette syndrome symptoms while singing on the same stage. Speaking to Official Charts, Capaldi thanked fans who had streamed and downloaded Survive, saying it 'really means the world'. 'I've been away for a little while, and to come back to this outpouring of love and support has been absolutely incredible. 'I can't thank everybody enough for all the kind words since Glastonbury – and now this. 'It's been the best week of my life,' he said. Speaking to the festival crowd on Saturday, he said: 'It's so good to be back. I'm not going to say much up here today, because if I do, I think I will probably start crying. 'But it's just amazing to be here with you all, and I can't thank you all enough for coming out and coming and seeing me. 'Second time's a charm on this one, everybody. 'It's just a short set today, but I just wanted to come and kind of finish what I couldn't finish the first time round.' Introducing Survive at the festival, Capaldi became visibly emotional as he said: 'The last two years haven't been the best for me, it's been difficult at times. 'This has been my f****** goal, to get back here,' he added. He ended his performance with Somebody You Loved, the track that Glastonbury crowds helped him to sing when he struggled with his Tourette symptoms in 2023. The condition causes you to make sudden, repetitive sounds or movements and while there is no cure, treatment can help manage the tics, according to the NHS website. Virgin is Lorde's fourth studio album, and her previous three, Pure Heroine (2013), Melodrama (2017) and Solar Power (2021) all reached the top 10 of the UK albums chart. Lorde, 28, whose real name is Ella Yelich-O'Connor, took to the Woodsies stage at Glastonbury on Saturday to perform the album in full to the packed tent and a crowd gathered outside. The New Zealand-born singer pulled her top off to finish with a double hit of Ribs from her debut album Pure Heroine, which she said was first played at Glastonbury in 2017, and Melodrama's Green Light, during which the lasers turned from blue to green. The final song prompted a football terrace-style singalong that almost drowned out Lorde herself. She is best known for songs such as Homemade Dynamite, Solar Power and her second single Royals, which reached number one in the UK singles chart.

Paul Libin, a Forceful Presence On and Off Broadway, Dies at 94
Paul Libin, a Forceful Presence On and Off Broadway, Dies at 94

New York Times

time14 hours ago

  • New York Times

Paul Libin, a Forceful Presence On and Off Broadway, Dies at 94

Paul Libin, a prolific producer and respected Broadway theater executive whose first major endeavor was an Off Broadway revival of Arthur Miller's play 'The Crucible' that he staged in the ballroom of a Manhattan hotel in 1958, died on June 27 in Manhattan. He was 94. His death, in a hospital, was confirmed by his son, Charles. In his nearly 70-year career, Mr. Libin ran Circle in the Square Theater with Theodore Mann, one of its founders, and together they produced more than 100 shows. Later, Mr. Libin was in charge of operations at Jujamcyn Theaters, the owner of several Broadway houses. Rocco Landesman, the former president and owner of Jujamcyn, said Mr. Libin had a wall-penetrating voice, a forceful presence and enormous energy. 'I depended on Paul entirely,' Mr. Landesman said in an interview. 'Someone had to run the company. But I wouldn't describe his role as corporate. He was as likely to be climbing into the air-conditioning ducts at the St. James Theater as he was to be sitting at his desk. He came in every day with enthusiasm.' That enthusiasm dated to Mr. Libin's early days as an assistant to Jo Mielziner, a Tony-winning scenic designer and producer. When Mr. Mielziner produced the Broadway musical 'Happy Hunting,' which opened in late 1956, he promoted Mr. Libin to stage manager. In 1958, on his way to a dentist appointment, Mr. Libin passed the Hotel Martinique, on West 32nd Street near Broadway, and saw a sign advertising the ballroom's availability. He thought of it as a space that he and the director Word Baker could turn into a theater-in-the-round for a production of 'The Crucible,' the 1953 Tony-winning Broadway play about the Salem witch trials and an allegory of the McCarthy-era Red Scare. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store