"Glassheart" is a song recorded by British singer-songwriter Leona Lewis for her third studio album of the same name (2012). The song was conceptualised by Lewis and frequent collaborator Ryan Tedder at his family home in Denver, Colorado. As she was experiencing a stressful time in her life, Lewis wanted to create an uptempo dance track with Tedder as she felt a ballad would make her more upset. It was co-written by Lewis and Tedder alongside Brent Kutzle, Noel Zancanella, Justin Franks, Fis Shkreli and Peter Svensson. Production of the song was handled by Tedder and Franks, with the latter credited under his production alias DJ Frank E. It was co-produced by Zancanella, Kutzle and Shkreli.
"Glassheart" | |
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Song by Leona Lewis | |
from the album Glassheart | |
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Length | 3:56 |
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"Glassheart" on YouTube |
"Glassheart" is an up-tempo dance song that incorporates elements of dubstep, grime and house music. Lyrically, it is about a woman's fear that her boyfriend will leave her and thus she protects her emotions and her heart from breaking. The song received positive reviews from music critics, many of whom praised the musical direction and its grimy, dubstep breakdown. Upon the release of Glassheart, the song debuted at number 27 on the UK Dance Chart due to strong digital download sales during the first week of Glassheart's release. It debuted at number 167 on the UK Singles Chart. Lewis has performed the song at London nightclub G-A-Y and an acoustic version for UK newspaper The Sun's Biz Sessions.
Inspiration and development
editAccording to Lewis, the song was conceptualised when the singer was experiencing a stressful time in her personal life when she visited her friend and co-writer of the song, Ryan Tedder in Denver, Colorado.[1] The aim of the trip was to visit Tedder and his family, as well as conceive ideas and themes for material to be included on Glassheart.[1] Lewis stated that she did not want to sing a ballad which would make her "more sad", therefore they decided to work on an upbeat dance song instead.[1] She asked Tedder: "Can you give me a song where I can just dance and jump around?", to which he replied "What about this?" as he played a beat which Lewis found "hypnotic".[1] Despite being in a raw form, Lewis was impressed with the song's beat, and said "Yes! We have to do this."[1] The collaboration with Tedder marks the third album of Lewis' on which the pair have worked together. They first collaborated on Lewis' debut studio album, Spirit (2007), on the songs "Bleeding Love" and "Take a Bow".[2] Tedder also co-wrote songs on Lewis' second studio album, Echo (2009), "Happy", "You Don't Care" and "Lost then Found", a collaboration with the group Tedder is a member of, OneRepublic.[3] In addition to the title track on Glassheart, Lewis and Tedder collaborated on the song "Favourite Scar".[4]
Recording and composition
edit"Glassheart" was co-written by Lewis with Tedder, Brent Kutzle, Noel Zancanella, Justin Franks, Fis Shkreli and Peter Svensson.[4] It was produced by Tedder and Franks, who is credited under his production name DJ Frank E; the song was co-produced by Zancanella, Kutzle and Shkreli.[4] The song was engineered by Smith Carlson, Mike Freesh and Sam Wheat; they were in assisted in the process by Tom Hough, while Daniela Rivera provided additional engineering.[4] "Glassheart" was mixed by Phil Tan at the Ninja Beat Club in Atlanta, Georgia; it was mastered by Colin Leonard at SING Mastering, also in Atlanta, using SING Technology.[4] Instrumentation of the song was provided for by multiple musicians: Shkreli was appointed head of sound design, and was also a drum programmer along with Freesh and Trent Mazour.[4] The guitarist enlisted for the song was Mazour, while Freesh served as the bassist.[4] The pair also provided the synths.[4] All other forms of instrumentation were performed by Tedder.[4] "Glassheart" was recorded at several recording locations around the world, including Patriot Studios, Denver, Colorado; Westlake Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California; Side 3 Studios, Hollywood, California and Metropolis Studios, London, England.[4]
"Glassheart" has been described as a dubstep,[5] dance,[6] house and grime[7] song that runs for 3:56 (three minutes, 56 seconds).[8] According to Jenna Hally Rubenstein for MTV Buzzworthy, the song consists of a "grimy, hazy beat", which she compared to "Too Close" (The Lateness of the Hour, 2011), a song performed by Alex Clare.[5] Lyrically, the song is about Lewis' fear that her lover will break her heart.[9] According to Lewis, the song is about protecting yourself, your heart, as well as your emotions.[10] She continued to describe the song as "poignant".[10] The singer went on to reveal that she decided to name the album after the song.[10] Lewis' "crisp" vocals can be heard above the instrumentation as she "croons about the fragility of her heart" as she performs the chorus lines "So baby if you love me/ Let me know/ 'Cause everything hurts just like before/ You're about to tear this heart apart/ I love you like a glass heart."[5] The chorus is built on a "transcendent house beat" as Lewis delicately sings the lines "Promise that we'll never fall apart/ And I'll love you with my Glassheart".[6] The chorus is then followed by a "euphoric instrumentation [that] collapses into a grimy dubstep break."[6] Rubenstein likened the lyrics to those performed by Blondie on her song "Heart of Glass" (Parallel Lines, 1978).[5]
Reception and live performances
editJenna Hally Rubenstein for MTV Buzzworthy was complimentary of the song, writing that Lewis had "[upped] the musical ante big time".[5] Rubenstein continued to highly praise the inclusion of the dubstep transition due to the fact that she thought she would never "use the words 'dubstep' and 'Leona Lewis' in the same sentence."[5] Caroline Sullivan for The Guardian described the song as "mood elevating with an abrasive grime beat."[7] Matthew Horton for Virgin Media described the song as "unexpectedly ravey".[11] Chris Smith for Yahoo! described the song as a curveball and wrote that he felt it is Lewis' "first truly club friendly track".[12] Sam Lansky for Idolator thought that although the song is radio-friendly, it is not "derivative".[6]
Lewis debuted the song at London nightclub G-A-Y on 5 September 2011; she performed the song as part of a mini set-list along with "Collide" and "Bleeding Love".[13] Lewis wore a black knee length dress, with a red heart emblem across her chest. The singer performed "Glassheart" at the Art on Ice concert in Zurich, Switzerland, on 31 January 2013.[14] "Glassheart" was performed as the sixteenth song on the set list of Lewis' 2013 tour called the Glassheart Tour.[15]
Track listing
edit- Standard edition[8]
- "Glassheart" – 3:56
- Deluxe edition (disc 2)[16]
- "Glassheart" (Acoustic) – 3:46
- Deluxe edition – iTunes bonus video[16]
- "Glassheart" (Live acoustic) – 3:49
Credits and personnel
edit- Recording
- Recorded at Patriot Studios, Denver, Colorado; Westlake Recording Studios, Los Angeles, California; Side 3 Studios, Hollywood, California; Metropolis Studios, London England.
- Mixed at Ninja Beat Club, Atlanta, Georgia.
- Mastered at SING Mastering, Atlanta, Georgia.
- Personnel
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Credits adapted from the liner notes of Glassheart.[4]
Chart performance
editUpon the release of the album, "Glassheart" debut at number 27 on the UK Dance Chart on 21 October 2012.[17] It also debuted at number 167 on the UK Singles Chart.[18]
Chart (2012) | Peak position |
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CIS (TopHit)[19] | 38 |
Russia Airplay (TopHit)[20] | 37 |
UK Dance (OCC)[17] | 27 |
UK Singles (OCC)[18] | 167 |
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f Love, Ryan (6 September 2011). "Leona Lewis interview: 'I want to give people the best of me' – Music Interview". Digital Spy (Hearst Magazines UK). Retrieved 23 June 2012.
- ^ Lewis, Leona (2007). Spirit (Liner Notes) (Compact Disc). Leona Lewis. London, England: Syco, J, Sony.
- ^ Lewis, Leona (2009). Echo (Liner Notes) (Compact Disc). Leona Lewis. London, England: Syco, J, Sony.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Lewis, Leona (2012). Glassheart (Liner Notes) (Compact Disc). Leona Lewis. Syco.
- ^ a b c d e f Rubenstein, Jenna Hally (21 September 2012). "New Song: Leona Lewis, 'Glassheart'". MTV Buzzworthy. Viacom. Archived from the original on 27 October 2012. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
- ^ a b c d Lansky, Sam (20 September 2012). "Leona Lewis Glassheart Listen". Idolator; Buzz Media. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
- ^ a b Sullivan, Caroline (11 October 2012). "Leona Lewis: Glassheart – review". The Guardian. Guardian News and Media. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
- ^ a b "'Glassheart' – Leona Lewis". iTunes Store (Great Britain). Apple. 12 October 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- ^ Corner, Lewis (11 October 2012). "Leona Lewis: 'Glassheart' – Album Review". Digital Spy. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
- ^ a b c Leona Lewis Interview. Clyde 1 Radio. (Global Radio Group). [Radio Interviewer]. Aired 17 September 2012.
- ^ Horton, Matthew (12 October 2012). "Leona Lewis – Glassheart – Review". Virgin Media. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
- ^ Smith, Chris (21 October 2012). "Album Review: Leona Lewis- Glassheart". Yahoo! Music. Archived from the original on 6 January 2013. Retrieved 26 October 2012.
- ^ Love, Ryan (5 September 2011). "Exclusive: Leona Lewis debuts 'hypnotic' third album 'Glassheart' title track: Video". Digital Spy. Retrieved 20 June 2012.
- ^ "Leona Lewis "Glassheart" live at Art on Ice 2013 video" (video). NME. Archived from the original on 8 April 2014. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
- ^ Corner, Lewis (17 April 2013). "Leona Lewis begins 'Glassheart' tour in Germany – pictures". Digital Spy. Retrieved 17 April 2013.
- ^ a b "'Glassheart' (Deluxe edition) – Leona Lewis". iTunes Store (Great Britain). Apple. 12 October 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- ^ a b "2012 Top 40 Dance Singles Archive 27th October 2012". Official Charts Company. 21 October 2012. Retrieved 21 October 2012.
- ^ a b "Chart: CL UK Update". zobbel.de. Official Charts Company. 27 October 2012. Retrieved 22 November 2012.
- ^ Leona Lewis — Glassheart. TopHit. Retrieved August 23, 2021.
- ^ "Russia Airplay Chart for 2012-12-10." TopHit. Retrieved June 18, 2022.