Becky Hill lays out all her ambitions for 'Believe Me Now?' on the opening track '
True Colours'. Vulnerable lyrics are twisted into a message of self-empowerment, while a guest spot from
Self Esteem leans into the healing nature of community that drives the more urgent, blissed-out moments of the record. "I was ready to do something different," says Becky, with the album taking inspiration from boundary-pushing dance records by the likes of Eric Prynz, Fedde Le Grand and Basement Jaxx from the early noughties. "I wanted to reference that moment of dance rebellion. I wasn't going to make more bubblegum dance music, I wanted to do something a little less obedient," says Becky. "'True Colours' is that to me. There's no real chorus, we're just yelling, and I love it. As soon as we wrote it, I knew it was going to be the opener. It feels very anti-everything. It was very much balls out," says Becky. "Writing that song felt like streaking through the rain."