Searchlight

Album: yet to be titled (2025)
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Songfacts®:

  • "Searchlight" is Shinedown's reminder that sometimes the most liberating thing you can do is politely (or not so politely) ask people to stop trying to save you. Its message - independence, self-determination, and the fine art of not needing a committee to approve your life choices - lands like a spiritual cousin to "Second Chance." Only here, instead of saying "Sometimes goodbye is a second chance," the band essentially says, "Sometimes you have to unplug the giant emotional lighthouse your loved ones keep aiming at you and run for it."

    "'Searchlight' is a song about owning your true feelings. It's an awakening of the soul," said frontman Brent Smith. "Lyrically it is a coming-of-age story that celebrates the moment you decide to go out into the world and find your purpose."
  • Shinedown debuted "Searchlight" live at their Grand Ole Opry debut on October 10, 2025. Smith introduced the track by saying: "Sometimes when you listen close enough to the universe... a song can come out of thin air. We didn't find this one, it found us."

    Shinedown performed a three-song set at the Grand Ole Opry, the other two tunes being "A Symptom of Being Human" and "Three Six Five."

    The studio version of "Searchlight" landed as an official single on November 18, 2025.
  • "Searchlight" stretches beyond Shinedown's rock roots, pulling in American folk, Americana, rhythm and blues, bluegrass, and a touch of outlaw country. Violins, pedal steel, and acoustic arrangements all make an appearance. It's a sound the band leaned into deliberately for their Opry moment, and they liked it enough to keep it.

    "Musically it is an homage to all the music our parents and grandparents brought us up on," said Smith. "It is a love letter to Americana, rhythm and blues, bluegrass, outlaw country, and, of course, rock 'n' roll."
  • Brent Smith wrote "Searchlight" with Shinedown bassist Eric Bass and with Dave Bassett, a frequent Shinedown co-writer since contributing to nine of the 11 tracks on 2008's Sound of Madness. Eric Bass produced the song at his Big Animal Studio in Charleston, South Carolina.
  • The music video - shot in Nashville the day after the Opry performance - was directed by Twenty One Pilots' longtime visual collaborator Andrew Donoho. It shows the band playing their own instruments, including banjo and pedal steel.

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