Musically, "Body Paint" is a lush, ambitious departure from the band's "leather jacket" era. Critics often describe the track as or art rock , drawing heavy comparisons to mid-70s legends like David Bowie and The Beatles .
Experience the cinematic scale of 'Body Paint' through these iconic live and official performances: Arctic Monkeys - Body Paint
The music video, directed by , is as complex as the song itself. Shot on 16mm Ektachrome film , it captures a vintage, 1970s aesthetic inspired by the cinematography of Gordon Willis (known for The Godfather ). The video uses meta-motifs like film reels and editing tables to explore the "creation of symbolic imagery," mirroring the song's themes of artifice and performance. Musically, "Body Paint" is a lush, ambitious departure
The song begins as a delicate piano-led ballad, anchored by Turner’s soulful falsetto and a rhythmic drumbeat. However, as the track progresses, it builds into a cinematic crescendo. Ornate strings and a "gritty" guitar solo split the song in two, bridging the gap between the band's newer experimental sounds and their rock roots. This musical complexity even earned the song a Grammy nomination for Best Alternative Music Performance. The Layers of "Body Paint": Lyrical Meaning Shot on 16mm Ektachrome film , it captures
Since their explosive debut in 2006, the have been the undisputed chameleons of indie rock. With each record, Alex Turner and company have shed their previous skin, evolving from high-speed garage rockers into the sophisticated, lounge-pop architects we see today. Nowhere is this evolution more striking than in "Body Paint," the standout second single from their 2022 album, The Car . A Masterclass in Baroque Pop
Some theories suggest the "body paint" is a callback to the band's own history, specifically the clown costumes from the "Fluorescent Adolescent" era, symbolizing a trace of their past that remains despite their evolution. Visualizing the Sound