The narrator of “Call Your Friends” has reached a juncture in her relationship with the addressee where, as Hannah Reid has explained in her own words, she has become emotionally dependent on him. Or more...
London Grammar’s “Talking” is one of those songs that requires us to go out pretty far on a limb in the name of making comprehensive sense out of it. But maybe out there near the...
London Grammar’s “All My Love” is one of those types of lyrical situations where it would just be best to resort to the singer herself in terms of understanding the song’s meaning. And in this...
Whom the singer is asking the titular question to is her ex. And in full what she is inquiring of him, most comprehensively, is “how does it feel now that (she’s) gone?” And in a...
It would appear that London Grammar’s “Missing” is romantic in nature. In other words, the vocalist would be addressing someone like her lover. This theory is made most supportable by the fact that Hannah Reid mentions...
We have already dealt with another song earlier on the playlist of London Grammar’s Californian Soil album, entitled Missing, where we put forth that the addressee was the vocalist’s womanizing lover. And it would appear that the...
This is, according to Hannah Reid’s own explanation, a song “about falling in love”. But more specifically the narrative is placed in a setting whereas someone such as herself has ample experience, which is playing in...
The best way to begin our explanation of London Grammar’s “I Need The Night” is by going straight to its chorus. It features Hannah Reid ‘needing’ to spend the night with other individuals who desire...
“America” is a really deep song, no matter which way you try to cut it. According to one of the explanations given by vocalist Hannah Reid, it doesn’t really have a meaning. Or more specifically, the lyrics...