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The song's lyrics are about addiction, [5] specifically substance abuse. [6] According to the song's writer, frontman Jonathan Davis, the song is actually written from the perspective of the drug itself, being inspired by Brad Paisley's personification of alcohol in his 2005 single "Alcohol", [6] and other older country music songs that touched on the subject. [7]
“This is a song I actually sat and took the time to write,” says the 23-year-old, who came up with the sappy love-bomb ballad while driving home from his son’s mother’s house at seven in ...
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Vilified's lyrics are a negative personification of artificial intelligence, referring to misinformation it may spread. Cantrell mentioned to Kerrang! in a 2024 interview regarding the song and I Want Blood : "...AI is a boogeyman we’ve grown up with, but now we’re living in a time that it’s becoming a reality to more of an extent.
"Ur So F**king Cool" (renamed "Ur So Cool" on clean versions) is a song by Australian singer Tones and I. [1] [2] [3] It was released on 29 May 2020 by Bad Batch Records and distributed by Sony Music in Australia and New Zealand and globally by Elektra Records. [3] [4] It was written by Toni Watson (p.k.a. Tones and I). [5]
Macklemore showed up the day of the shooting of the video in a middle school gym in Los Angeles where he says that he was informed that they might: [1] re-arrange the structure of the song to fit the NBA event. He added that in any licensing deal, they are going to edit anyway. A "4-minute song does not fit into a 30-second movie trailer.
Although Rocky George and R.J. Herrera did not play on the album version of "Institutionalized", both can be seen on stage in the video performing the song with Suicidal Tendencies. A video was also made for the Still Cyco After All These Years version (with Woronov reprising her role). In the video, Muir's parents are locked up and try to escape.
It quickly became popular after the music video for the song was uploaded to YouTube on April 22, 2007, and has since been viewed more than 139 million times as of December 2024. [1] " Chocolate Rain" was ranked as the hottest viral video of summer 2007 by CTV and was awarded the 2008 YouTube Award in the category "Music".