"Joan of Arc" is a song recorded by British girl group Little Mix, and appears as the sixth track on their fifth album LM5 (2018). It was released on November 2, 2018 as the album's first promotional single.[1] It was written by group members Leigh-Anne Pinnock and Jade Thirlwall, along with Loosechange handling the production.
A music video for the song was filmed however for reasons it was never disclosed to the public. They first teased the song on their Instagram account in the middle of August the same year.[2] Joan Of Arc charted in Australia, Ireland, New Zealand and the UK and has since been certified gold in Brazil. In 2022, it was ranked as Little Mix's thirteen biggest selling non single in the UK.[1]
Background and release
"Joan of Arc" was written by Leigh-Anne Pinnock, Jade Thirlwall, Hanni Ibrahim, Patrick Patrikios, Philip Plested and Alexandra Shungudzo Govere and Loosechange who handled the production. It was recorded on June 8, 2018, and was released as the first promotional single for their fifth studio album LM5 (2018).[3] It was then mixed by Wez Clarke and then mastered by Randy Merrill.[4]
Composition and lyrics
"Joan of Arc" is a trap-pop song that contains bouncy hip hop drum beats[5][6] that runs for three minutes and eleven seconds.[7]Direct Lyrics went as far as to call it an "urban-pop song with a little Caribbean-esque just in the middle."[8] It contains pop-rap verses, with a thudding bassline full of snaps and hard finger clicks.[9] Lyrically, it contains themes and messages of female empowerment and independence.[10][11][12] Pinnock raps the lyrics "One foot in the club, everybody watch me. One pop of that booty, everybody love me. Ain't the reason I'm cocky. I make myself feel sexy," over a "scrizzy synths."[citation needed]
Live performances
Little Mix performed the song live for the first time at an album launch show for Apple Music on 13 November 2018 in London.[13] The song became part of the setlist of the group's sixth concert tour, LM5: The Tour, in 2019.
Critical reception
Idolator called the song a "fiercely feminist anthem", and a "undeniable banger". They also mentioned the similarities from their songs from their fourth studio album Glory Days (2016).[14] Brooke Bajgrowicz from Billboard mentioned that "The girls continue to fiercely proclaim their independence."[15]
Rolling Stone UK called the song as a empowering sassy, and trap-pop track thats sees the group celebrating independence above a bouncy, trap-inflected beat.[16]Billboard described it as a girl power bop with the girls continuing to proclaim their independence."[17]
Cosmopolitan included the song on their list of 20 Songs Perfect for Your Masturbation Playlist.[18]