"Electric Lady" | |||||||||||
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Single by Janelle Monáe featuring Solange | |||||||||||
from the album The Electric Lady | |||||||||||
Released | July 30, 2014 | ||||||||||
Recorded | 2013 | ||||||||||
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Length | 5:08 | ||||||||||
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Janelle Monáe chronology | |||||||||||
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"Electric Lady" is a song by American psychedelic soul and R&B singer Janelle Monáe featuring singer Solange. It was released on July 30, 2014 as the fourth and final single from Monáe's second studio album, The Electric Lady.
The song serves as the title track from the album and is one of the more up-tempo tracks on the album. Taking on the concept of female empowerment, "Electric Lady" focuses on the need for women to be themselves while at the same time maintaining self-control over their bodies and sexuality; therefore, taking the power over women's bodies from men. As with her song, "Q.U.E.E.N.", Monáe raps the climax portion of the song to further get her point across. She describes an electric lady during the rap section claiming, "She can fly you straight to the moon into the ghettos/Wearing tennis shoes or in flats or in stilettos," and "Illuminating all that she touches, eye on the sparrow/A modern day Joan of her Arc, or Mia Farrow."
Writing for Rolling Stone magazine, Ryan Reed describes "Electric Lady" as "a perfect showcase for Monáe's eclectic talents, as she praises the mythical title woman over soulful horns and a shapeshifting groove."
A music video for the song, directed by Alan Ferguson, was released on July 30, 2014. It features Janelle Monáe as a college student. After saying goodbye to her mother, portrayed by Monáe's real life mother, Janelle leaves the house and attends a Greek party with her sorority sisters, the Electro Phi Betas. During the party, she describes what makes a woman an electric lady while dancing signature black fraternity and sorority dances. Near the end of the video Monáe, now dressed as a band leader, leads the South Atlanta High School marching band as they play their instruments along with the record. The dances were choreographed by Fatima Robinson and Atlanta-based choreographer Shawn Bankhead, who both make cameo appearances in the video. T.I., T-Boz, Monica, Esperanza Spalding, Estelle, Joi, and Kimbra also make cameo appearances in the music video.