Potsu’s “I’m Closing My Eyes” is relatively-terse in and of itself, on top of the lyrics being highly repetitive. But still, there is a distinguishable story being told therein. And the addressee is a romantic interest...
XXXTentacion and Ski Mask the Slump God were two homeys who sort of grew into professional rap musicians together. But that is not to say that things were always all gravy between the two...
According to the chorus, the pair of rappers are “wilding out” on this song (“Off the Wall”). That’s another way of saying that they’re not holding their tongues in exhibiting their disorderliness. And one subject...
The “rich and blind” individual recognized in the title is Juice WRLD himself. Or stated otherwise, he is “a lost soul” who depicts himself as being on the road to self-destruction. This is specifically due...
As you may have already deduced, the titular “her” is a reference to a romantic interest. And the way XXXTentacion has “changed her life” can be interpreted in a sensual sense, as in he...
On this song, Lil Wayne especially takes on the role of a “school shooter”. A school shooter is someone who, succinctly put, commits a mass murder at an educational institution. And such criminals are invariably...
“Bad Vibes Forever” is a love song of the type that you would expect from the featured artists. In other words it has a strong sensual subtheme. That is to say that one of the...
Like many of XXXTentacion’s song, especially those released posthumously, “Hearteater” is quite terse lyrically. It has logically been concluded to be based on the rapper’s well-publicized, tumultuous relationship with a young lady by the name...
XXXTentacion’s “Royalty” focuses primarily on the song’s narrators bragging either about their wealth, violent nature/toughness or both. The “royalty” aspect can be found especially in Ky-Mani Marley’s chorus, where he claims that regality is in...
In “Everybody Dies In Their Nigthmares”, XXXTentacion expresses anxiety about going to sleep and other common aspects of life, such as women and traffic. What this and the title itself actually alludes to is that...