As we’re dusting off Gotye’s absolute hit with my acapella choir, I cannot help but think about how it is that this song made it to our hearts and our brains, and stayed there fresh for over 10 years (yes my dears, it was released in 2011!)?
What’s the secret behind goosebumps-inducing “Somebody That I Used To Know” by Gotye featuring Kimbra?
Let’s take a closer look!
Although I’m sure that you can almost instantly hear the joyful and childish sound of the xylophone intro in your head (what a contrast to the tragic topic of the song), we’ll be focusing mainly on the lyrics here. (Only because I am the “lyrics-first” kind of person – it’s my occupation, my passion, and my never-ending interest.)
Just a few facts for starters: the song instantly went viral, became the best-selling song, topping the charts all over the world, won several awards (including Grammys), sold more than 13 million copies, and currently has 2 billion views on YouTube. That’s what one great and truthful song can do – even if it’s recorded at your parents’ house and comes with a lower-budget music video.
Why is the song so mesmerizing?
The lyrics are simple yet genius, capturing the bittersweet reality of lingering at the edge of a toxic relationship, wanting to both get out and never leave:
You can get addicted to a certain kind of sadness
Like resignation to the end, always the end
So when we found that we could not make sense
Well, you said that we would still be friends
But I’ll admit that I was glad it was over
Describing the cognitive dissonance of it all:
Told myself that you were right for me
But felt so lonely in your company
…And the painful desire to be recognized by someone
whose attention only makes you doubt your self-worth:
Now and then I think of all the times you screwed me over
But had me believing it was always something that I’d done
But you didn’t have to cut me off
Make out like it never happened and that we were nothing
And I don’t even need your love
But you treat me like a stranger, and that feels so rough
Gotye describes—with quite simple words—a difficult experience most of us sadly recognize all too painfully well… at least from one point in our life.
The hit song cookbook
I guess the secret to a hit of this kind might very well be:
“Write something that is so common experience
that almost everyone can find themselves in it,
but make it very, very personal with your own story.”
Gotye himself explained in an interview that the song was “drawn from various experiences I’ve had in relationships breaking up, (…) the memory of those different relationships and what they were and how they broke up and what’s going on in everyone’s minds. Yeah, so it’s an amalgam of different feelings but not completely made up as such.”
So… pretty easy, right?
No–a song like that must be lived first before it can get a life of its own. So, get a life, grab a pen, and write about it. And if you’re lost for words, let us figure them out together. Maybe we’ll write the next hit!
It is truly fascinating how so many people just desperately want to write a hit song. I don’t see why that should be anyone’s goal -why not just simply create something without being obsessed by how successful ir will be.
Hi Todd,
Thanks for taking the time to read my article and to leave a message. I totally get what you mean but when I was writing this article, I had something else in mind.
I believe that musicians and songwriters naturally create from their hearts and simply from the need to create and share. And to being able to share this experience, they (also naturally) want people to listen to their art. Because keeping it for yourself is half the fun…
E. g. when you write a book, you also want many many people to read it. Isn’t that quite similar?
This article’s attempt was to analyze where these two groups meet and what it is about a song that resonates with so many people. Is there a quality/joint experience/feeling that we all go through? It is written out of curiosity and inspiration, since I myself am drawn to certain songs and wanted to know why. Why do some songs get so much praise and others don’t?
I don’t support writing songs only with commercial goals in mind. Plus I don’t believe it truly works. Such song is usually lifeless and vanishes quickly.
Vs. “Somebody That I Used To Know” was written in the “simply creating” mode (according to the author), and still it became a huge part of our lives. And that’s fascinating!
Do you write songs? And what is your approach?
Thea