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Mr Electric Blue
2025 song by Benson Boone From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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"Mr Electric Blue" is a song by the American singer Benson Boone from his second studio album, American Heart (2025). He wrote the song with his frequent collaborator Jack Lafrantz and its producer, Evan Blair. A rock song with a style similar to the works of the band Electric Light Orchestra, "Mr Electric Blue" serves as a tribute to Boone's father. It became available as the album's second track on June 20, 2025, when it was released by Night Street and Warner Records. A music video directed by Matt Eastin premiered on the same date; it addresses public criticism of Boone, including one-hit wonder and industry plant allegations.
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Release and composition
Night Street and Warner Records released American Heart as Benson Boone's second studio album on June 20, 2025, including "Mr Electric Blue" as its second track.[1][2] Boone wrote "Mr Electric Blue" with Jack Lafrantz and Even Blair; the latter served as the song's producer and audio engineer, and played several instruments including bass, guitar, keyboards, and drums. Dale Becker was the mastering engineer, accompanied by Katie Harvey and Noah McCorkle as assistants, while Alex Ghenea was in charge of the mixing. It has a duration of three minutes and ten seconds.[3] Writing for Vulture, the critic Jason P. Frank categorized "Mr Electric Blue" as a "third-person rock song about rad folks", and paired it with "Bennie and the Jets" (1974) by Elton John, "Ziggy Stardust" (1972) by David Bowie, and "Pinball Wizard" (1969) by the Who.[4] In the lyrics, Boone shares his admiration to his father, worshipping him as a hero: "A good hardworking American / But he ain't the guy you want to fight".[5] Music publications noted similarities with the works of the English rock band Electric Light Orchestra.[6][7]
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Music video
A music video for "Mr Electric Blue", directed by Matt Eastin, premiered on June 20, 2025, in parallel to American Heart.[8] Starring Boone as himself, the video addresses criticism from the public directed to him after the commercial success of the single "Beautiful Things" (2024).[9][10] The video begins with him wearing a "one-hit wonder" shirt and meeting an agent from a fictional record label named "Industry Plant Records"—referencing the allegations of the singer being an industry plant—to which he owes US$ 10 million.[10] The agent—played by the song's co-writer and the singer's frequent collaborator Jack LaFrantz—tells Boone that he is failing and they need "good songwriting", to what the singer responds, "You know I can't do that."[9][10] He attempts to earn the money doing several jobs, including selling used jumpsuits and mowing lawn for a company called "Auto-Tune Trimmers".[8][9] After meeting a girl who believes his music is terrible, Boone earns $168 and asks the agent for another chance.[9] They tell him that his music was sold to chain stores and fast-food restaurants, achieving his goal of being "the most overplayed artist in the world".[11][12]
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Critical reception
For Billboard, Andrew Unterberger ranked "Mr Electric Blue" as the eighth best track on American Heart. The critic described it as unclear and confusing, and interpreted its title character as an "odd mix" of "Ziggy Stardust", "Bad, Bad Leroy Brown", and "Mr. Blue Sky". He also criticized its video as "fun-but-overstuffed".[13] In negative reviews of American Heart, Rolling Stone's Brittany Spanos and Pitchfork's Jeremy D. Larson considered "Mr Electric Blue" one of the few good moments on the album; the former highlighted the "earnest tribute" to Boone's father.[7][14] Jonah Krueger from Consequence wrote that the song's chorus is nonsensical.[6]
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References
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