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Ophelia (The Lumineers song)

"Ophelia"
LumineersOphelia.jpg
Single by The Lumineers
from the album Cleopatra
Released February 5, 2016
Format Digital download
Recorded 2015
Genre
Label Dualtone Records
Writer(s)
Producer(s) Simone Felice
The Lumineers singles chronology
"Submarines"
(2013)
"Ophelia"
(2016)
"Cleopatra"
(2016)

"Ophelia" is a song recorded by American folk rock band The Lumineers. It was released as the lead single from their sophomore release, Cleopatra on February 5, 2016.

So far, the song has garnered over 113 million streams on Spotify.

The song started out as a slower instrumental demo that Jeremiah Fraites, (one third of The Lumineers), sent to Wesley Schultz, (lead vocalist of The Lumineers), back in 2011. According to Schultz, the demo generated enough excitement to work on the project. While playing at a backbar in LA alongside The Lumineers, Schultz wrote the song's hook, which was:


Soon after, The Lumineers felt they needed to find a proper substitute for the name Ophelia. This was due to the fact that a song of the name had been released many years prior by the band, The Band. Nevertheless, this issue reached its end after Schultz decided that no other name had "the right musicality to it." Subsequently, Schultz had trouble writing "good" verses to carry the hook he wrote, which made the songwriting process so difficult that the project was completely abrogated until four years later. In January 2015, when it came time to work on a new record, the defunct "Ophelia" was resurrected.

Over a series of vocal demos, the song was recorded at The Clubhouse in Rhinebeck, New York.

On February 8, 2016, via Facebook, the single's cover art was premiered, along with an eighteen second long snippet of the song.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Schultz said that the song's lyrics are "a vague reference to people falling in love with fame."

The song can also be heard on CW's The Flash in the last scene in Season 2 Episode 22 "Invincible".

The song has received mixed reviews from music critics. The song was praised by Marina Watts of The Cornell Daily Sun; where Watts refers to "Ophelia" as "hauntingly beautiful," along with also noting that the song is "a march that wishes anyone who ever falls in love the best of luck." David Dye of NPR also viewed "Ophelia" positively, while comparing its musical influences and style to The Lumineers' earlier hit, "Ho Hey."


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