My inner sleuth kicked in the second I read your question, because 'Part of Me' is a song title that multiple artists could conceivably use, but the clearest, biggest-match is Katy Perry’s track. She released it as a single in 2012 and that era produced a lot of live footage and TV appearances where she performed the song. If someone sang part of those lyrics on tour, Katy is the usual suspect.
That said, titles get reused and covers happen all the time, so if you caught only a lyric fragment it’s worth doing a quick lyric search. I often paste a memorable line into Google wrapped in quotes plus the word “lyrics” to pull up the original performer on Genius or AZLyrics, then add “live” or the city name to find performance clips or setlist entries. Another reliable method is setlist.fm: search the artist you suspect, then scan the setlists from the tour dates you care about. Social platforms like Twitter and Instagram can be surprisingly helpful too — search the tour hashtag and you’ll often find fan clips. If you want, tell me the exact lyric you heard and I’ll help track down which artist (and which tour stop) sang it live for you.
Oh—if you mean the pop single titled 'Part of Me', the artist most people mean is Katy Perry. She released 'Part of Me' in 2012 and even put out the concert documentary 'Katy Perry: Part of Me' around the same era, so the song is strongly associated with her live shows. I’ve watched clips from her tours where she belts it out between confetti and choreography; it’s one of those radio-era anthems that translates really well to a stadium set.
If you’re trying to find a live performance from a specific tour, my go-to moves are to check setlist.fm for the particular tour name and year and then search YouTube for “Katy Perry ‘Part of Me’ live” plus the city — many fans upload full songs from individual stops. Official live releases, TV performances, and the documentary are also good sources if you want higher-quality audio and video.
I once tracked down a fantastic live version from a festival clip and ended up rewatching it between classes like a guilty pleasure — so if you tell me which tour or year you’re thinking of, I can help narrow it down or point you to a specific performance that matches what you heard.
Most likely you’re thinking of Katy Perry — she sang 'Part of Me' live a lot around 2012 and it even ties into the film 'Katy Perry: Part of Me', so fans commonly recognize her as the performer. If you only have a lyric snippet, the fastest way I use is to paste the line in quotes into Google with the word “lyrics” to find the original track and artist, then add “live” or a year to the search to hunt down concert clips.
If that doesn’t turn anything up, try setlist.fm for the suspected artist, or search YouTube and Instagram for fan-shot videos from the tour. I’ve tracked down obscure live renditions that way more than once—just tell me the lyric you heard and I’ll dig in with you.
2025-08-30 22:47:40
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But by the time I get back, Cornell is gone. To make things worse, my digital ticket shows that it has already been checked in.
Anxious, I call him and ask, "Have you gone in? Why does my ticket show that I've checked in?"
Cornell replies, "Oh. I ran into Ellie Valdez, the intern from our department, just now. She was crying at the entrance because she couldn't get a ticket, so I gave yours to her."
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I am so shocked that I don't know what to say.
After a few seconds, I say in disbelief, "So you left me out here, all alone, for an intern's sake?"
Cornell sounds dismissive as he says, "You can hear the music from outside anyway. Just find somewhere to sit and wait until the music festival ends. Don't be so selfish."
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Quinn isn’t falling for a fantasy. She doesn’t even know him.
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I get this question a lot when people sing along to the chorus and wonder who actually wrote those lines — if you're talking about the 2012 pop single 'Part of Me' by Katy Perry, the songwriting credits go to Katy Perry, Bonnie McKee, Lukasz Gottwald (a.k.a. Dr. Luke), and Max Martin. I love how pop credits often hide the real teamwork behind a three-minute anthem: Bonnie McKee is famous for sketching hooks and lyrics with Katy, and then producers/writers like Max Martin and Dr. Luke shape the structure and polish the phrasing until it hits radio-perfect territory.
From my perspective, the heart of the lyrics—those punchy, defiant lines—come from Katy and Bonnie's playful but cathartic collaboration, but the final words you hear were honed in a group setting. If you want the formal breakdown, checking the liner notes of the single or the performing rights databases (ASCAP/BMI) will show the official credits and performance splits.
Also worth noting: there are other songs called 'Part of Me' (for example, Chris Cornell has a different tune with the same name that he wrote himself), so if you meant a different artist, say so and I’ll dig into that version. I still find it awesome how a few writers in a room can translate a messy breakup into a stadium-ready chorus—I sing that bit in the shower every time I need to feel invincible.
Bursting into this topic, I love how tiny lyric changes can totally flip a song's mood — and 'Part of Me' is a great example of how many faces a single track can wear. In studio album versions you usually get the fully arranged, lyrically complete story the artist intended: all verses, the bridge, and repeated choruses polished with background harmonies. That feels like the "canonical" voice of the song, the one printed on lyric sites and sung at karaoke nights.
But when you start comparing versions you find neat differences: radio edits often trim lines and shorten repeated choruses to fit time limits, while "clean" versions will remove or replace profanity and occasionally swap a metaphor for a safer phrase. Acoustic or live takes can either simplify lyrics, cut ad-libs and repetitions, or sometimes add an improvised line to heighten intimacy. Covers can change pronouns or swap cultural references to make the song fit the cover artist; I once heard a gig where the singer altered a single phrase and it reframed the entire chorus, which was wild. Remixes and collaborations sometimes insert a brand-new verse from a guest artist, so the narrative expands.
Then there are demos and early versions that show draft lyrics — different bridges, alternate hooks, or lines that the artist later refined. Translated versions add another layer: the translator will rework sentiment to rhyme and scan in the target language, so meaning shifts subtly. If you love dissecting lyrics, I’d recommend listening to an album version, a live performance, and a demo or acoustic cut back-to-back — the contrasts are surprisingly emotional and revealing.
If you mean Katy Perry's 'Part of Me', the public debut of the lyrics basically coincided with the single's release in February 2012. The song was sent out as a standalone single around February 13, 2012, and the lyrics started showing up on official channels and major lyric sites right after that — record-label posts, fan sites, and places like Genius and AZLyrics usually mirrored the official release within days. Sometimes artists or labels publish the lyrics on their own websites or social pages the same day the single drops, so that’s the first place I’d check for a concrete timestamp.
That said, it's worth remembering that songs can leak early or be performed live before an official drop, and when that happens lyrics can surface earlier via bootlegs or fan recordings. I once followed a track that had no official lyric sheet for weeks, only to find a scanned press kit with the lyrics in an image someone uploaded. If you want a definitive first-public appearance, digging through the Wayback Machine for the artist's site or searching for the earliest cached lyric pages on lyric sites will usually point you to the earliest public footprint.
If you were asking about a different song titled 'Part of Me', there are several tracks with that name by different artists and the earliest public release of lyrics will depend entirely on who you mean. Tell me the artist and I’ll dig up the clearest date and the best evidence I can find.