Lights Down Low (Max song)

"Lights Down Low" is a song by American singer Max Schneider (better known as MAX) from his 2016 album, Hell's Kitchen Angel. The song was written by Schneider, Nathaniel Motte, and Liam O'Donnell, with Motte serving as the producer.[5] A later remix of the song includes a feature and writing contribution from singer gnash. The song, which MAX used to propose to his wife Emily, was released in October 2016; it became a sleeper hit, entering the Billboard Hot 100 more than a year after its release, and also earning a Platinum certification from the RIAA for sales of more than 1,000,000 copies. The song had an accompanying music video tracing the life of a couple living in an apartment. A "Latin Mix" featuring Argentine singer Tini was released on December 15, 2017.[6]

"Lights Down Low"
EP cover
Single by MAX featuring gnash
from the album Hell's Kitchen Angel[2]
ReleasedOctober 14, 2016 (2016-10-14)[1]
GenrePop[1]
Length3:44[1]
LabelDCD2[1][2]
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Nathaniel Motte
MAX singles chronology
"Basement Party"
(2016)
"Lights Down Low"
(2016)
"Did You Wrong"
(2016)
gnash singles chronology
"Home"
(2016)
"Lights Down Low"
(2016)
"Lonely Again"
(2017)

Background

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After recording the song, MAX played it for his girlfriend, Emily, followed by a marriage proposal which she accepted.[7][3] Originally, MAX planned to release the song in its solo form, but he decided to feature American rapper gnash on it after "this moment where I was like, 'Well, I kind of hear [gnash's] voice on "Lights Down Low." I never considered a rapper, it's a ballad, but you know what? I'm just gonna talk to him.'"[3]

After the song's release, it drew much attention in the LGBT community.[3][8] In a 2017 interview with Billboard, MAX stated that "It's not our song anymore. It's everybody's song. Everybody is able to add whatever they want to it, what it is to them, and in that way, it becomes so much less — it's not about us anymore. It's not about even the artist or the writer or the singer, it's about what it can stand for for people."[3]

Composition

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"Lights Down Low" is a midtempo pop song, with a length of 3 minutes and 44 seconds. Its instrumentation consists of keyboards, drums, guitar, and handclaps with Guitar pop and Acoustic pop elements and features a "Soulful" voice.[9] Sheet music for the song shows the key of E major.[10]

Music video

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The music video stars MAX and his wife, Emily.[7] The music video was shot above a bed; it depicts MAX in various relationships over the course of his lifetime. The video was directed by Crush Music and Christian Snell. Jade Ehlers, who is the creative director at Crush Music, explained that "the music video depicts what one's life might look like if they lived in one apartment their whole life."[11]

Commercial performance

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The song was a sleeper hit,[12] becoming MAX's first Billboard Hot 100 entry as a lead artist.[13] It peaked at number 20 on the chart dated March 3, 2018.[13][14] The song reached number one on the Billboard Adult Top 40[15] and number seven on the Mainstream Top 40.[13] The radio promotion for the song was led by Brent Battles and Christopher Steven Brown of RED MUSIC. It also reached number 11 on the Canada Hot Adult Contemporary chart.[13] Its unexpected success was credited to strong airplay by hot adult contemporary stations in the United States.[16]

In Belgium, the song peaked at number five on Ultratip's Bubbling Under Singles chart, spending a total of eight weeks on the chart.[17]

In September 2017, the song was certified Gold in the United States for sales of more than 500,000 copies. In January 2018, the certification was upgraded to Platinum for sales of more than 1,000,000 copies.[18][19]

Charts

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Certifications

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RegionCertificationCertified units/sales
Australia (ARIA)[37]Gold35,000
Canada (Music Canada)[38]3× Platinum240,000
Denmark (IFPI Danmark)[39]Gold45,000
Netherlands (NVPI)[40]Gold20,000
United Kingdom (BPI)[41]Silver200,000
United States (RIAA)[42]3× Platinum3,000,000

Sales+streaming figures based on certification alone.

References

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