This song (“Energy”) isn’t the easiest to derive a thesis sentiment from, even as far as a Beyoncé outing goes. But first of all, it should be noted that this is a dance track. Owing to this, the...
The way the ideas in The 1975’s “Happiness” are presented are in sort of a helter-skelter fashion, as they seem, to some extent, to be flying a bit all over the place. For instance, the...
The titular road plays an important economic role in the lives of the family of the vocalist, even for generations actually. For example, it is somewhere along Copperhead Road where John Lee Pettimore III (...
The lyrics of In Flames’ “Embody the Invisible” start off in an existential, epoch-alluding sort of way, with the vocalist speaking to the extinction of species but permanency of the Earth itself, and that...
There are parts of Beyoncé’s “Renaissance” album, disses if you will, which many analysts, in some instances hastily, attributed as being aimed at Beyoncé’s husband, Jay-Z. Well if such is the case, then the same has...
It seems kinda odd that some major music publications went out as far as to actually single out “Mary on a Cross” as being blasphemous, as liberal, secularized use of religious terminology and, to a lesser...
There’s a lot going on in this song (“Human Being”), especially when you combine what’s being put forth lyrically with the explanations that Arkells and Lights have offered. Indeed, as implied by its title, “Human Being” is...
The vocalist “made out” with a girl, and in the aftermath she’s left wondering if making such a bold move was the right decision. Such is the basic backdrop upon which this “Got Weird” is...
The title of this song (“Doja”), as you’ve probably already figured, serves as Central Cee’s ways of publicly expressing romantic interest in Doja Cat, i.e. another, shall we say more-popular rapper from the other...
A narcissistic person is someone who, more simply put, is conceited. But in reality narcissism, as clinically defined, is a lot deeper than that. Indeed the way the vocalist initially describes the addressee, i.e. the romantic interest...