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Lessons to Learn From the Launch Of Sam Smith’s “Unholy”

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People.com

Sam Smith just released their new album “Gloria” on the 27th of January. As described by Pitchfork, “Gloria flips between hyperpop, country, dancehall, disco, 2-step, and intimate, Kehlani-esque R&B”. Through the different genres, the album features Ed Sheeran, Koffee, Jessie Reyez, and Kim Petras.

“Unholy”, featuring Kim Petras, was the second single from this album to be released. It dropped on September 22, 2022, and ended up being incredibly successful. It reached  #1 on the US Hot 100 chart and also spent quite a long time topping the UK charts as well. To this day, it is still in the US top 10.

The song’s success was helped by an intense social media marketing campaign. Unholy’s catchy chorus was perfectly suited for a TikTok audio - and Capitol Records knew that. 

The Campaign & Launch

Capitol UK’s general manager (Tom Paul) is credited as the mind behind the marketing campaign for “Unholy”, and he helped Smith orchestrate a release of a sample on TikTok in August.

Paul’s plan worked, and it blew up almost instantly on the app. Fans were shocked to hear this kind of sound coming from Sam Smith, and demands for the song’s release came quickly as it gained traction with various trends.

People.com

The most popular variation of this audio now has >2.5 million videos using that sound, not to mention countless other variations with hundreds of thousands of video uses.

Smith rode that wave of interest, and continued to do so for a very long time

A side effect of the song being everywhere was that fans got used to the 20-second earworm. Usually, when a song blows up on the app, users can then search for the full song, and not being able to do so was frustrating to some fans. Hearing the same part over and over again did not help this.

Videos started popping up on TikTok with fans expressing their concerns. The common theme among these videos is how they already felt “over” the song, and that they should have released “Unholy” at its peak while it was trending.

The label did intend to release it sooner, however, the Queen’s death pushed back the song’s release by another week. Even before that setback, it was already a popular audio for well over a month.

Some fans also had an issue with Unholy’s length. At only two minutes and 37 seconds, fans felt that there was not much material beyond the audio they had already been exposed to. Additionally, fans found that the audio on TikTok sounded dramatic and rich, whereas the final release was more muted.

Key Takeaways

The idea to promote the catchiest part as a TikTok audio was an excellent one - it drove an immense amount of anticipation for the release. However, if you tease a song for too long you run the risk of fans moving on to other things. 

By teasing music on social media, artists are able to receive feedback about what works and what doesn’t on their songs. Unholy’s punchy, bass-intensive chorus on TikTok never came to fruition, which led to disappointed fans. Artists should be sure to pay attention to the feedback they receive about what works and what doesn’t prior to release.

While “Unholy” was still incredibly popular and a commercial success for Smith and their label, you can’t help but wonder if it would have done even better if they had released it sooner.