Hammer

Album: Virgin (2025)
Charted: 66
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Songfacts®:

  • Described by Lorde as "an ode to city life and horniness," "Hammer" kicks off Lorde's 2025 album Virgin. The first line - "There's a heat in the pavement, my mercury's raising" - is less scene-setting and more emotional weather report. You're not just in the city; you're steaming in it.
  • What follows is a tangle of sexual metaphors, philosophical nods, and some sharp emotional honesty. Consider the titular lyric:

    Don't know if it's love or if it's ovulation
    When you're holding a hammer, everything looks like a nail


    This is a wink at the law of the instrument, a concept coined by psychologist Abraham Maslow, who noted: "If the only tool you have is a hammer, you treat everything like a nail." In Lorde's world, that hammer is desire, and every nail is, well, up for interpretation.

    The lyric appears only once in the song, but it's doing heavy lifting - equal parts punchline, theory, and pickup line. It's Lorde in a nutshell: post-grad philosophy major meets downtown club kid.
  • "Hammer" is also about identity, transformation, and being completely open to change. Lorde sings:

    Some days I'm a woman, some days I'm a man

    This isn't new territory for her; in the Virgin single "Man Of The Year," Lorde explores gender fluidity and a sense of in-between-ness, part of what she's described as being "in the middle gender-wise."
  • And then there are the song's Lorde-specific moments of reinvention, like:

    Today, I'll go to Canal Street, they're piercing my ears
    I'm making a wish when the needle goes in.
    Take an aura picture, read it and tell me who I am


    Lorde really does go to Magic Jewelry on Canal Street, New York's most esoteric gift shop/energy lab, to have her aura photographed before each album cycle.
  • Lorde wrote and produced "Hammer" with Jim-E Stack, her main collaborator on Virgin. She told Triple J's Abby & Tyrone that Stack is "the most emotionally intelligent and available person I've ever worked with."

    She said their collaboration is built on deep trust, which allows Lorde to be vulnerable in her songwriting. "He and I get in a room, and we tell each other everything," she explained.
  • The music video takes a turn for the natural. Shot by Dominican-American photographer Renell Medrano in Hampstead Heath, London, it shows Lorde dancing, swimming, and swinging naked in a hammock. It's raw, sensual and playful, which is basically the song's entire mission statement.
  • "Hammer" is one of several songs on Virgin that features sexual content, despite the album's contradicting name. Speaking on Therapuss with Jake Shane, Lorde said the album title "speaks to a sort of purity, but the album is quite sexual, so it wasn't sexual purity... virgin steel, virgin hair, all of these things that denote purity, but I'm also kind of always trying to take me to my teen self."
  • On "Hammer," a walk down Canal Street turns into a swirl of psychedelic visions. Lorde told Apple Music's Zane Lowe the song was born shortly after she stopped taking birth control, an experience that left her overwhelmed by emotion and sensation. "Everything felt like pure possibility," she recalled. "That first sound feels like it's coming from a really guttural place in the body."

    Her sister put it more bluntly: "It sounds like it's coming from your womb."

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