Officially, the Song of the Summer is a matter of accounting. Billboard rolls out a chart every year in June that tracks the songs with the most radio plays, streams, and sales on its charts from Memorial Day through Labor Day. But the designation is obviously bigger than math alone.Each year, music publications attempt to predict the song that'll earn the Song of the Summer mantle in some sort of weird March Madness knockoff. Spotify also just unveiled a playlist of its Summer Essentials—tunes that can be used in a variety of ways over the summer, including "lounging by the pool" or a "summer workout." This wide range of different vibes qualifying up a Song of the Summer hints at a larger problem with any objective attempt to award the title.
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If something is to be crowned the Song of the Summer, it must be malleable enough to fit any possible permutation of warm weather celebration possible in the radio-listening Western world. Summer is a time of new loves and late-night bacchanalia, but it can also be a time for sweaty, bedroom-bound antipathy—the brain-frying months where you feel better off alone.It's an unenviable task to make a song that can be twisted to any listener's purposes. So much great art comes from specificity, but making a song of the summer requires deliberate vagueness. No one understands this better than post-EDM/pop producer Calvin Harris, whose music seems engineered to work in virtually any environment.This year, the producer rolled out two singles that fit the bill for an all-purpose summer hit—"Slide" featuring Frank Ocean and Migos, and "Heatstroke" with Ariana Grande, Pharrell Williams and Young Thug. Both songs—off Harris' forthcoming album Funk Wav Bounces Vol 1—combine catchy synth refrains with easy, bouncing beats. To quote Grande on "Heatstroke," they compel you to "release, let go, and have a good time."If any songs could claim the seasonal title this year, it's these two. Sure, Harris might not be the most risk-taking producer out there—but with previous smashes like "Feel So Close" and "This Is What You Came For" under his belt, there's no denying the man is a hit machine, especially when festival season rolls around.
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So, are there lessons to be learned from patterns in his productions? Below, we've scrutinized Harris' oeuvre, and come up an extremely scientific analysis of just what makes a Song of the Summer tick.When making a song of the summer, get Rihanna. Sure, that's a tall order, but festival dancers respond to this husky-voiced songstress as eagerly as Drake in the music video for "Work." Seriously though, many of Harris's summer-oozing hits feature Rihanna or another high-caliber singer like Ellie Goulding, Ariana Grande, or Frank Ocean.It's no secret that the public eats up collabs between DJs and well-known pop stars, to the point that it's now a formulaic trope. That's because making a song of the summer is not about originality: it is about the joy of our cyclical return to warmer, better days, embodied by the carefree voices of the stars we idolize.Plus, science says that the sooner that songs bring in vocals, the more likely these tracks are to grab a listener's attention and become hits (good luck with that mainstream summer hit, ambient producers!). So if you're aiming to be a chart-topping maestro like Calvin Harris, find your RiRi and put her in quick.Calvin Harris songs always have lyrics that are catchy as hell, but simple enough for anyone to sing along to after hearing them for the first time. Consider this verse of what is arguably his most summery song of all: "Summer.""When I met you in the summer / To my heartbeat sound / We fell in love / As the leaves turn brown."
1. A Rihanna vocal
2. Sing-along lyrics
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How does one fall in love to a heartbeat sound? UNCLEAR. But "Summer" just repeats and then devolves this one verse into a series of "Hey!'"s and "Oh!'"s, and suddenly we're all in love to a heartbeat sound yet glad that we experienced summer love. This is the power of simple lyrics.We already know that 99.999% of the Songs of the Summer are about hitting the dancefloor/finding love on the dancefloor/finding yourself on the dancefloor. Luckily for Mr. Harris, this is his milieu. He is the master of creating musical climaxes that make you want to jump in the air, punctuated with periods of chilling out so you can go wild again.Harris' song structure has a lot to do with a fast—but not too fast—tempo, which a statistical analysis of pop hits shows is a growing trend within the pop world as a whole. According to research at Ohio State University, top-10 singles on the American charts from 1986 to 2015, have gotten faster and faster, with less time spent on intro instrumentals before you hear the singer wailing. All of this is happening as producers strive to keep up with one thing: our rapidly diminishing attention spans.Over the summer of 2016, the internet freaked out over the so-called "millennial whoop," a ubiquitous alternating-note melody sung with "Eh!'s" and "Oh!'s". "Music, especially pop music, is based on patterns," says the narrator in Quartz's explainer video. "It makes new songs feel familiar, because you've basically heard them before."Naturally, Calvin Harris knows this trick. In 2017's "My Way" and 2012's "Feel So Close," he employs a minor-4 chord to bring some faux dark complexity, then explodes into an upbeat guitar rhythm peppered with exuberant repetition. Both songs' initial chord progressions are also nearly identical. Calvin, you sneaky dog.
3. A fast tempo to make you D-A-N-C-E
4. Familiarity
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