It has been ascertained that in “Patient Number 9”, Ozzy Osbourne is taking on the role of a patient inside of a mental institution. As expressed in the lyrics, the vocalist feels as if he’s...
The generally-accepted interpretation of “Put Me in a Movie” is that Lana Del Rey is taking on the role of a girl with starlet fever, who is accordingly taken sexual advantage of by older,...
“Selfish” is basically what we will refer to as a pick-up song. PnB Rock had met a certain lady whom, most honestly explained, he became instantly infatuated with, and these lyrics mark an expression of his...
Mass killings really started to become a recurring phenomenon in American society circa the early 1990s. But the event that is generally perceived to have ushered in the modern age of mass, random killings is...
What the title of this track alludes to, as utilized in context, is the inevitability of death. And the reason why Zach Bryan, who isn’t that old himself, is harping on such a topic is...
The way that Danny O’Donoghue described “Dare You to Doubt Me” gives the impression that it sports sort of a macrocosmic message of positivity. Maybe such is the case, but it gets that message across in a...
As we have noted in the past, some videogame soundtracks are such that they utilize mainstream songs or tracks that have a general applicability. Put simply, they don’t speak to the game per se. ...
Contemporary musicians appear to be getting more creative in terms of relaying feelings of romantic disappointment. Gone are the days of simply lamenting a broken heart, and now musical artists appear to be getting a...
Before you get too alarmed in relation the title of this track (“I Am the Antichrist to You”), let it be known that this song is in fact, as explained by Kishi, a “strange love song”....
Tom MacDonald does have a tendency to drop confrontationally-braggadocious lyrics here and there, but “Riot” is perhaps the first song of his we’ve come across that is entirely of that nature. So when you see...