One Of The Greats

Album: Everybody Scream (2025)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "One of the Greats" is Florence Welch's raw and cathartic reflection on survival, ambition, and the sometimes ruinous price of being extraordinary.
  • The opening lines are ripped from Florence Welch's life:

    I crawled up from under the earth
    Broken nails and coughing dirt
    Spitting out my songs so you could sing along


    The lyric is about her emergency life-saving surgery in 2023 after suffering a miscarriage caused by an ectopic pregnancy. She feels as though she has crawled back from the brink of death to do what she has always done: perform.
  • The song asks the same questions that haunted Florence + the Machine's third album, How Big, How Blue, How Beautiful: why keep chasing transcendence when it takes everything out of you? And yet, there she is, singing through the dirt and the stitches, proving once again that survival can sound like a hymn.
  • On this track, Welch claps back at critics (mostly men) who have ridiculed for her bigness: her grandiose, windblown, arms-to-the-heavens brand of performance that powers songs like "Dog Days Are Over" and "Shake It Out." In this line, she skewers the double standard outright:

    It must be nice to be a man and make boring music just because you can

    It's a jab at the critical indulgence her male peers enjoy while she's spent years defending the sheer size of her expression.
  • The song originated with what Welch calls "a long poem about the cost of greatness," that was written in a single, unfiltered take with Idles guitarist Mark Bowen. She read straight from the page, he strummed guitar, and the song was captured in one take. The plan was to polish the track later, but the rough draft carried so much jagged energy they left it as it was.

    Aaron Dessner of The National later helped elevate the recording to what Welch called "a truly transcendent place."
  • Musically, "One of the Greats" begins in unsettling territory, all scraping chords and near-whispered vocals. The arrangement grows heavier, almost suffocating, before unraveling at the edges. By the end, Welch's voice thins to a thread, simulating the very disintegration she described to BBC Radio 1's Jack Saunders: "You sort of destroy yourself for something, and then you dig yourself up all over again to do it again."
  • The song arrived with a nocturnal visualizer by Autumn de Wilde, who's been part of the Florence cinematic universe since the 2022 Dance Fever album. It shows Welch in the back of a car at night, sunglasses on, cigarette in hand, part rock star, part weary pilgrim, still moving forward.
  • "One of the Greats" pokes fun at the double standards women face in music with the lines:

    I'll be up there with the man and the 10 other women and the 100 greatest records of all time
    It must be nice to be a man and make boring music just because you can


    Welch wrote those lyrics partly out of frustration, and partly out of envy. "A lot of the lines in there, I just found them really funny," she said in a live interview with Brittany Spanos at New York's Cherry Lane Theatre. "It was this feeling of, 'When is it going to be good enough?' I give so much, and sometimes I wonder if, in that giving, people don't take me seriously."

    She contrasted her expressive style with what she calls the "masculine cool" of artists who stay aloof or mysterious. "Sometimes when I listen to things that have that level of reserve, I'm just like, 'Isn't this kind of boring though?'" she laughed.

    Welch admitted the lyric also reflects a tongue-in-cheek jealousy: "Maybe it would be an easier life to be able to hold things back, to just be hot in a T-shirt and everyone's like, 'Wow, it's revolutionary.' If you're insulting someone, it comes from envy, honestly."

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Little Big Town

Little Big TownSongwriter Interviews

"When seeds that you sow grow by the wicked moon/Be sure your sins will find you out/Your past will hunt you down and turn to tell on you."

Millie Jackson

Millie JacksonSongwriter Interviews

Outrageously gifted and just plain outrageous, Millie is an R&B and Rap innovator.

Don Dokken

Don DokkenSongwriter Interviews

Dokken frontman Don Dokken explains what broke up the band at the height of their success in the late '80s, and talks about the botched surgery that paralyzed his right arm.

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17

Martyn Ware of Heaven 17Songwriter Interviews

Martyn talks about producing Tina Turner, some Heaven 17 hits, and his work with the British Electric Foundation.

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In Songs

Sending Out An SOS - Distress Signals In SongsSong Writing

Songs where something goes horribly wrong (literally or metaphorically), and help is needed right away.

John Lee Hooker

John Lee HookerSongwriter Interviews

Into the vaults for Bruce Pollock's 1984 conversation with the esteemed bluesman. Hooker talks about transforming a Tony Bennett classic and why you don't have to be sad and lonely to write the blues.