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Lyrics powered by LyricFind. Add Your Thoughts 23 Comments. General Comment I wouldn't be surprised if this song became a single, it is really good. I instantly loved it when I first heard it live, and the album version is maybe even better. Seems to be about regretting things that you've done, maybe wishing things had've gone differently. Starebot on February 08, Link. No Replies Log in to reply. There was an error. General Comment It's all about regret and the past, along with not wanting to face it.

The first part with the train and his mind are his thoughts and memories. The second part is about his disguise and the people he met and wanting to hide from them. The third part is about loneliness which is why he talks about how cold it is and the light is fading into a darkness hence the sunset part.

Then the last part is where how he can't escape and so he prays knowing in the end nothing can change it and only one person can forgive it. Hip-hop has always been a safe haven for those who went searching for tenderness in a world that had none to offer.

Hidden between perfectly-poised paragra. Puerto Rican singer Farruko is on top of the world. His eighth studio album La , released on October 1, is already platinum—no doubt buoyed by massive.

Through the eight-track pr. In May , I went home to Columbus, Ohio to visit my mother. If you came of age in the '80s, there's a good chance they played this song at your prom or homecoming dance. If you're not paying attention, it might sound like an ode to endless love. But listen again and you'll realize it's actually told from the point-of-view of a stalker. Even Sting is stunned by how his lyrics have been completely misunderstood.

We were all too busy singing "Shake it like a Polaroid picture" to wonder what this song was really saying, but you don't have to read between the lines to realize it's about a profoundly unhappy marriage. What else could this be but a song about a bar closing at the end of the night and the bartender telling everybody to get out?

Well, as it turns out, it's really about a baby being born. Singer Dan Wilson wrote this song for his daughter, who was born 3 months prematurely. Wilson tried to keep the lyrics ambiguous, so his bandmates wouldn't get annoyed about playing a song about a baby. But at this point, Wilson is mostly amused that nobody figured it out. Anytime we hear the song , we automatically think of that video with Chevy Chase , where he hilariously lip syncs next to a miserable-looking Paul Simon. As it turns out, Simon was giving more clues about what the song's about than Chase.

What if I die here? The song's narrator wanders through a foreign country, out of money and looking for "angels in the architecture.

Whatever the future holds for him, it isn't good. You probably thought "MMMbop" was just a nonsense song about a nonsense word. But it may be one of the most deeply philosophical songs ever written and performed by kids.

Zac Hanson, who was just 11 when the song was released, explained that "MMMBop" is really about the "futility of life. James Blunt didn't mince words when explaining his reaction to fans who think "You're Beautiful" is a romantic ballad. So if it's not supposed to a paean to a woman's beauty, what is going on exactly? This foot-tapping tune by Paul McCartney always seemed pretty straightforward. Not really.

So it's really a song about that, it's not to a person… It's actually an ode to pot. Like someone else might write an ode to chocolate or a good claret. If you're judging by the chorus, this song used in presidential campaigns by Ronald Reagan and Bob Dole is about as patriotic as it gets.

Sometimes breakup songs take a tearful look at a relationship that fell apart, and sometimes they're not about breakups at all but really about vampires. Wait, what? Jim Steinman, the guy who penned "Total Eclipse of the Heart" for Bonnie Tyler, says the song's original title was "Vampires in Love" and if you listen carefully to the lyrics, "they're really like vampire lines," he says.

There've been some wild claims about what troubled genius Kurt Cobain was trying to say with this song's bizarre lyrics. Probably the strangest explanation came from his widow, Courtney Love, who insists the song is about her, um… private area. But in the authorized Nirvana biography Come As You Are , Cobain was pretty clear about the song's meaning, explaining that it's about "little kids with cancer.

Apparently he watched some infomercials that featured terminally ill children and found it "sadder than anything I can think of. The rumors surrounding this Phil Collins hit are nothing short of macabre. As the urban legend goes, Collins wrote this song after watching a man let someone drown without trying to save him. There are even stories that Collins found the man in question, invited him to a show and then singled him out in front of a sold-out audience, announcing that "In the Air Tonight" was about him before breaking into an especially vicious version.

But none of this is true, according to Collins. As he explained in a Tonight Show interview, the song was about his divorce. This is one that the vocalist has with a fellow female who recently reached out to her.

Back in the day they were besties. However, as time progressed, they did not get along so well. But Billie is still bothered by their breakup to this day.

So she considers the matter just like that of her ex. That is to say that she is compelled to admit that she still loves this person, even as with the days of old. And that may be because she has yet to replace her. So once again in the meantime, she has to make herself dislike this person in the name of retaining her sanity, so to speak.



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