The song received mixed reviews frommusic critics who praised Grande's vocals and the song'sbrassy production but criticized its similarity to her 2014 hit "Problem". "Focus" debuted at number seven on theBillboard Hot 100 chart with 113,000 downloads in its first week. It was Grande's sixth top-ten single, and her first unaccompanied by another artist. The song also reached the top ten in Canada, Australia, Austria, Italy, Israel, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. By January 2016, "Focus" sold 544,000 copies in the United States and was certified double Platinum by theRIAA.
Its music video, directed byHannah Lux Davis, premiered on October 30, 2015, on Grande'sYouTube channel. Until 2019, it remained the fourth most viewed music video on Grande's YouTube channel. She performed "Focus" at the2015 American Music Awards and at theiHeartRadio Theater Los Angeles concert, and it was on the set list of the second leg of Grande's 2017Dangerous Woman Tour.
"Focus" was written by Grande,Savan Kotecha,Peter Svensson and its producers,Ilya Salmanzadeh andMax Martin.[1]Serban Ghenea mixed the song, assisted by John Hanes.[2] Grande began working on a new material for her third studio album in May 2015, posting details about the project on social media and in conversations with the public. The album was originally entitledMoonlight.[3] The singer posted an unfocused picture of herself on herInstagram page in July 2015 with the caption "Focus", calling it a "hint". A video released in September 2015 by iHeartMedia Music Summit demonstrated that Grande,Republic RecordsCEOMonte Lipman and her manager,Charlie Walk, played the song to the approval of the Republic Records staff.[4]
Grande announced the single during her September 15, 2015 appearance onThe Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, with a release date of October 30.[5] She began posting snippets of the song's lyrics, video and audio previews andpixelated versions of the single's cover in early October on Instagram andTwitter, and unveiled "Focus"' cover art on October 14. A week before the song's release date, A 15-second snippet of the track was used in a commercial for Ari by Ariana Grande, the singer's debut fragrance.[6] "Focus" wasdigitally released worldwide on October 30, 2015,[7] and was added tohot adult contemporary playlists in the United States on November 2.[8] It was later released to American and Italiancontemporary hit radio stations on November 3 and 6 respectively.[9][10] "Focus" was released as amaxi single in Japan on December 4, with regular version containing a mini-calendar and a mini-poster,[11] whilst deluxe edition containing a poster and an A7-sized notebook.[12]
The song was originally intended to be the lead single of Grande's then-named third studio album,Moonlight.[13] Republic Records later toldBillboard that the track had been removed from the album's standard edition and that the lead single will be changed to "Dangerous Woman".[14] The song was moved to the album's Japan edition as a bonus track.[15][16]Vulture editor Dee Locket explained that "Focus" was not included on the album's final cut because the song's rollout was not "remembered as a success – it was calculated to a fault, too polished for a time when pop's biggest stars, particularly its women, were letting their flaws bleed into the music."[17]
According to sheet music published byKobalt Music on Musicnotes.com, "Focus" was written in the key ofG♯ minor and set in4 4 time at a moderatetempo of 100 beats per minute. Grande's voice ranges from C♯4 to G♯5.[18] Aretro-styled song, "Focus" is based on a1970s-inspireddance beat.[19][20][21][22] According to Ryan Reed ofRolling Stone, its instrumentation features "stabbing big-bandbrass" (withsaxophone,trumpet and atrombone), smoothsynths and clangingpercussion with synthesizedhandclaps and acowbell.[23] The song'shorn foundation has been compared to Grande's 2014 single, "Problem" (featuring Australian rapperIggy Azalea) from her album,My Everything.[24][25] In anEntertainment Tonight interview, Grande acknowledged "Focus"' similarity to "Problem"; she thought the former would be the "perfect transition record" from her last album to her new album, because it sounds like "Problem 2.0".[26]
Lyrically, Grande asks for attention and focus. According toIdolator's Robbie Daw, the pre-chorus resembles the intro ofKC and the Sunshine Band's 1975disco song, "That's the Way (I Like It)".[21][27] Marcus Floyd ofRenowned for Sound wrote that in the second verse, Grande "addresses her haters and insists that they address her realness".[28] Its "funky"chorus consists of the repeated phrase, "Focus on me", sung by American actorJamie Foxx in abass voice.[29] Grande explained the hook:
When I say, "Focus on me", I'm not asking to be the center of attention. I'm not asking you to focus on my face or my clothes or my body or my singing voice. By "focus on me", I literally mean focus on me. Focus on what I'm all about and what I believe in. The more we focus on each other as people and not on what we look like, what we're wearing, our gender, our hairstyle, our sexuality, the color of our skin. But focus on each other on a soul level. The more we realize how much we have in common, the more we listen to each other, the more one we become.[30]
Amy Davison fromDigital Spy praised "Focus"' "sax-driven" beat;[31]The Verge's Kaitlyn Tiffany called Grande a "massively talented vocalist", and "Focus" a "very pleasant" listen.[32]Time's Nolan Feeney noted that although it was similar to "Problem", it may not have been a poor single decision.[33] OnRenowned for Sound, Marcus Floyd called "Focus" predictably "catchy and attention grabbing"; the song ticks "all the boxes of an effective lead single." Giving it four out of five stars, he wrote that "Focus" is one of Grande's "stronger single releases" to date but did not "venture out" of her "comfort zone."[28] Steven J. Horowitz ofBillboard gave the song two-and-a-half out of five stars and wrote that Grande had never released a "less-than-great" single until "Focus", which he considered a "weak" rehash of "Problem".[34]
Time called "Focus" the fifth-worst song of 2015, calling Grande's vocal "dwarfed" by "too-big instrumentals" as it had been on "Problem" and "Break Free"; however, the latter two had a "sustaining energy" which "Focus" lacked. The singer needed a "tightly constructed, elegant hit" after her2015 doughnut controversy, "and this isn't it".[35] Although Brennan Carley ofSpin called the song a "catchy slow-burn" and a "horn heavy piece of retro-modern fusion", Grande's vocals lacked "real excitement from a star who's got the restraint and skill to take her instrument places most otherpop singers can't anymore." Carley criticized the song's "male howling" for "[getting] grating quickly" and making "Focus" too similar to "Problem".[24]
"Focus" debuted at number seven on theBillboard Hot 100 in the United States, selling 113,000 digital downloads in its first full week, becoming Grande's sixth top-ten single and fourth top-ten debut on the chart.[37] It was her first solo top ten in the country, unaccompanied by another artist.[37] The song entered theDigital Songs chart at number five and was number 13 on the Streaming Songs chart, with 13.3 million domestic streams.[37] It fell to number 13 in its second week on the Hot 100, rebounding to number 12 in its third week following Grande's performance at the2015 American Music Awards.[38] By April 2018, "Focus" sold over 544,000 digital downloads in the US and was certified double Platinum by theRIAA.[39] It debuted and peaked at number eight on theCanadian Hot 100, Grande's fifth Canadian top-ten single.
The song debuted at number ten on theOfficial Singles Chart in the United Kingdom, Grande's third top ten after the number-one singles "Problem" and "Bang Bang".[40] In its second week, the song fell fourteen positions placing at number 24; it spent a total of 14 weeks on the charts. "Focus" also reached the top ten in Australia, Austria, Greece, Italy, the Netherlands and Spain.[41][42][43][44]
The video begins with Grande texting the phrase "focus on me" on a cell phone. During the first verse, scenes of Grande lip-syncing the song are intercut with silhouettes of the singer dancing in a purple circle. She then performs a choreographed routine with six backing dancers on a purple set. During the second verse, she smiles and poses in a square wearing a black mini dress and highToni Basil-style boots. For the song's bridge, the singer (in a star-print leotard, photographed in black-and-white) lies on a neon-lit set, plays a trumpet and performs with her dancers.[48] The video ends with her right eye illuminated.Teen Vogue's Ella Cerón noted its "slightly throwback" visuals, which match the song.[49]
Sean Fitz-Gerald ofVulture called the video's geometric look similar to the videos forDrake's "Hotline Bling" (2015) andLil Mama's "Lip Gloss" (2007).[50]Billboard's staff ranked the music video for "Focus" as Grande's seventh-best, describing it as "out-of-this-world" with "star-emblazoned jumpsuits and neon wigs"; they compared the clip's aesthetic to theDisney Channel Original MovieZenon: Girl of the 21st Century (1999) and Grande's dancing toBeyoncé's in the video for "Single Ladies (Put a Ring on It)" (2008).[51] The music video has received over 1 billion views onYouTube, becoming her eighth most-viewed upload on the site.
Prior to the release of "Focus", Grande started teasing snippets of the song during the last shows ofThe Honeymoon Tour in October 2015. Grande performed "Focus" live for the first time on the Honda Stage at theiHeartRadio Theater in Los Angeles on October 30, 2015.[52] She also performed the song at the2015 American Music Awards on November 22, ranked byBillboard as the best performance of the night.[53] According to Bruna Nessif ofE!, Grande brought some "old Hollywood glamour" to the performance.[54] Grande performed "Focus" and a cover of "Merry Christmas (War is Over)" onDisney's Christmas Day special.[55] The song was also performed on theDangerous Woman Tour in 2017 starting with the second leg in Europe.
^"ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic.Note: Select 02. týden 2016 in the date selector. Retrieved January 23, 2016.
^"ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Digital Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic.Note: Select 46. týden 2015 in the date selector. Retrieved November 17, 2015.
^"ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Radio Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic.Note: insert 201552,53 into search. Retrieved January 6, 2016.
^"ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Singles Digital Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic.Note: Select SINGLES DIGITAL - TOP 100 and insert 201546 into search. Retrieved December 12, 2015.