There’s a well-worn arc in pop music, particularly for women. You get discovered, you get packaged, you get told what to record, what to wear, and what kind of song will land on the charts. If you’re talented enough and/or lucky enough, it works. You get the fans, the streams, the fame. And then, if you’re really brave and want to show you’re a true artist, you eventually get something rarer than all of it: control.

That’s the arc RAYE has been living, loudly and publicly. After years of being shelved and sidelined by Polydor Records, she reclaimed her career, released My 21st Century Blues on her own terms, and became one of the most talked-about artists in the world almost overnight. But here’s the thing about artists who fight that hard for their freedom: they don’t spend it making the same record twice.

“Click Clack Symphony,” RAYE’s new song co-written with film composer Hans Zimmer, is the sound of an artist using her freedom to go somewhere most pop stars never dare.

RAYE 2026 black and white Live Photo
RAYE by Aliyah Otchere

RAYE is not about that tired, archaic, unspoken agreement in mainstream pop where labels push aspiring artists into a box: make it catchy, make it digestible, make it easy (aka the bubblegum pop factory). Songs that get both soccer moms and their daughters shaking it out … These pop songs are easy across the board. And the formula works.

Generations of pop stars, many of them women who had little say in the matter, built entire careers on exactly that formula. The music moves units, and the tours sell out. The machine keeps spinning. Most artists, even those who quietly yearn for something more, never step off that conveyor belt. They get cozy when the money is too good, and the audience is comfortable; the risk of alienating either is too frightening.

What RAYE has done with “Click Clack Symphony” is consciously, deliberately step off it. And it makes perfect sense considering her evolution. This song, albeit not her first with Hans Zimmer, is perhaps the start of her epic — the album that catapults her to another level as an artist. We saw it with Rosalía’s LUX, and it sounds like RAYE is taking a bold new direction.

“I had zero creative control,” RAYE said in an interview with the GRAMMYs. “I blinked, and I’d turned into something I didn’t recognize. I was honestly really heartbroken and had gone against everything I said I’d never compromise. I just felt like a puppet, and I was for a long time.”

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Uplifting and 100 percent empowering (especially the sound of those power heels), the lyrics move you. From RAYE’s opening monologue to her encouraging lyrics, we’ve all been that woman in need of support, because let’s be real, “the cold never lasts, my darling, it just teaches the heart how to burn.”

“The song is about the sounds that high heels make. It’s about those times in our life when you need your best friends or your siblings to drag you out of the house and say ‘I know you’re not in the best place right now but we need to get outside’. Thank goodness for those people in our lives that help us in our dark times.” ~ RAYE

Collaborating with Hans Zimmer, a 68-year-old Oscar-winning film composer whose world is cinematic orchestration, not pop radio, carries zero algorithmic logic. There’s no trending sound here. Instead, there’s a genuine artistic collision between two creatives who operate in entirely different sonic universes. And that tension, that improbability, is precisely what makes the song so thrilling, next to its epic sound, of course.

RAYE 2026 press photo red sparke glitter dress by Aliyah Otchere
RAYE by Aliyah Otchere



RAYE is an artist who, having finally wrested control of her career after years of label frustration, is using that freedom to go somewhere genuinely unexpected. Every creative choice she’s made since going independent has felt intentional, and this one feels like her boldest yet.

This distinction matters more than it might seem on the surface. There has always existed, in the minds of serious music listeners and artists alike, a quiet but firm divide between pop music — engineered for pleasure, for accessibility, for commerce — and music that reaches for something harder to name.

Art. Experimentation. Emotion. All things alternative, perhaps.

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The kind of sound that doesn’t care whether it fits a viral dance. Most working musicians understand this divide intimately, even if few say it plainly. Pop is not lesser for what it is, but it is, almost by design, not built to challenge. It is built to comfort, to hook, rinse, and repeat.

There is freedom in art.

What RAYE is signaling with this collaboration is that she is no longer content to simply comfort. She is reaching for the other thing — the more challenging, soul-fulfilling thing that most artists spend entire careers building toward. And she’s not doing it quietly; instead, she’s enlisting one of the most celebrated composers alive and putting it at the center of her upcoming album.

That takes a specific kind of courage. Not the courage of a debut artist with nothing to lose, but the harder courage of someone who has already won the crowd and is choosing, deliberately, to test whether they’ll follow her somewhere unexpected.

With This Music May Contain Hope dropping March 27 via Human Re Sources, and a sold-out headline North American Tour kicking off March 31, “Click Clack Symphony” announces something bigger than a new single. It announces an artist at the beginning of a genuinely new chapter, another impressive step in her evolution. One written entirely on her own terms, in a language she’s choosing for herself. From writing to producing, melodies, and more — RAYE’s Midas touch is all over her album. It’s her creative vision, and she has clearly decided that where she’s going matters more than whether it’s easy to get there.

That’s what separates a pop performer from an artist.

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