2023 in Songs

TW: Mentions of depression, suicidal ideation, and unspecified trauma.

This year, with the help of Phenelzine, I fell in love with music again, which has brought me so much joy. It did, of course, also make it even harder than previous years to narrow down the songs for this list. In an earlier post, I wrote this: “It’s so easy for time to make things blurry and for songs to transcend time that I love being able to see exactly when songs impacted my life and what they meant to me. I kind of love the idea of looking back one day – sometime in the future – and knowing which exact songs I connected to, rather than just having a vague sense of which artists and albums I loved.” I still really relate to it and it felt appropriate after what feels like so much time lost in the haze of my depression over the last couple of years when I wasn’t really listening to music at all. But, as I said, things have been getting better and I’ve been able to connect with music again, to enjoy it; I’m not sure if I can express how grateful I am for that. I’ve missed it so much.

So, this is my playlist for 2023. I’ve made a corresponding playlist on Spotify so you can listen along if you’d like to – you can find it here.


1. She Used To Be Mine by Sara Bareilles

The new year began as the last one ended, with the feeling that I was suffocating under the weight of my depression. As last year’s post shows, I don’t really listen to music when I feel like this but Sara Bareilles is the one artist that can get through the fog; the one artist that I can listen to pain-free. ‘She Used To Be Mine’ came on (it’s a gorgeous song and Sara has the most incredible voice) and after this awful year (and change) I’ve had, the title lyric in particular – “she is gone but she used to be mine” – resonates so strongly. The person I was before all of this… I don’t feel like she’s mine anymore. I remember her but who I was then and who I am now are not the same people. Sometimes I think she might be gone.

Favourite Lyrics: “She’s imperfect but she tries / She is good but she lies / She is hard on herself / She is broken and won’t ask for help / She is messy but she’s kind / She is lonely most of the time / She is all of this mixed up / And baked in a beautiful pie / She is gone but she used to be mine” AND “It’s not what I asked for / Sometimes life just slips in through a back door / And carves out a person / And makes you believe it’s all true” AND “And you’re not what I asked for / If I’m honest I know I would give it all back / For a chance to start over / And rewrite an ending or two / For the girl that I knew” (but honestly the whole song is stunning).


2. Mountain With A View by Kelsea Ballerini

I love this whole EP so much that it was honestly really, really hard to choose just one song. ‘Blindsided’ and ‘Interlude’ rank very high up on my list but I think my absolute favourite has to be ‘Mountain With A View.’ I love the production – it creates such a gorgeous atmosphere, perfect for opening the project – and the soundscapes wrapped in it, the storm in the background giving it a heavy feeling but one that will eventually break and clear. Kelsea’s voice sounds incredible, gorgeous and warm and intimate, something that makes me feel like, as the listener, we are being let into her world and her heart in a way that we haven’t before. The melodies feel effortless, as if guided completely by the emotion, like a river moving through a landscape to the sea. The lyrics are delicate and vulnerable, with visceral (but beautiful) imagery and metaphors smoothly twisted together, like: “I’m wearin’ the ring still, but I think I’m lyin’ / Sometimes you forget yours, I think we’re done tryin'” and “I’ve shared all my secrets and I’ve paid for all my crimes / And our stars ain’t fallin’ back in line” and “I think that this is when I cut the ties / I think that this is when I set myself free / One day you’ll ask, ‘When was it over for you?’ // I’m takin’ the ring off, I’m finally cryin’ / Don’t try to find yours, no reason to fight it.” A heartbreaking detail is how she seems to become more and more certain of what she feels she has to do throughout the song, the lyrics shifting from “I should be missing you” and “I think we’re done trying” to “I can’t handle another year of you and I just bein’ fine” to “I’m taking the ring off, I’m finally crying” and “Don’t try to find yours, no reason to fight it.” That last chorus-bridge-chorus is just so heartbreaking as it all breaks down, as she accepts the end and the consequences of making that decision. My favourite lyric of the song, even if it makes my chest hurt (especially because of how Kelsea has talked about how painful her parents’ divorce was for her, how much it affected her), is “You’ll say I’m crazy for bein’ the one to leave / Scream, I’m just like my parents and givin’ up easy.” It’s so sad: if you love someone, it’s just so cruel to throw something like that in their face, something that you know will hurt so much. Including that in the song just feels so vulnerable and I’m touched by fact that she’s trusting us – her listeners – with something so personal and painful. I think it’s ultimately this openness and trust in her audience that makes this body of work so strong. Of all of her projects, this EP is easily my favourite so far and I doubt I’m alone in saying that it’s the best work she has produced to date.

(I also think it’s worth noting that the obvious title for this song, given the hook, is ‘Over For Me,’ which would’ve been a neat and petty match for Morgan Evans’ single, ‘Over For You.’ We know from interviews how angry that song made Kelsea, especially given that he released it before they were even officially divorced, so it would’ve been easy to be juvenile and use it to strike back at him but because she’s mature and sensitive and thoughtful about her art, she knew it was important for the art to stand on its own: to be about her experience and her feelings. It was always going to generate a certain level of gossip because they were a fairly public, celebrity couple but as far as I can tell she’s done a really good job of telling her story without feeding the gossip machine any more than absolutely necessary.)

Favourite Lyrics: “I’m wearin’ the ring still, but I think I’m lyin’ / Sometimes you forget yours, I think we’re done tryin’ / I realize you loved me much more at twenty-three / I think that this is when it’s over for me” AND “I’ve shared all my secrets and I’ve paid for all my crimes / And our stars ain’t fallin’ back in line” AND “I think that this is when I cut the tie loose / I think that this is when I set myself free / One day you’ll ask, ‘When was it over for you?’ // I’m takin’ the ring off, I’m finally cryin’ / Don’t try to find yours, no reason to fight it / You’ll say I’m crazy for bein’ the one to leave // Scream I’m just like my parents and givin’ up easy / But you never took that last flight to see me / Looks like our ending ain’t endin’ happily / I think that this is when it’s over for me”


3. SUBJECT TO CHANGE by Kelsea Ballerini // Let It Be Love by The Six One Five Collective 

March was a month of really serious change so ‘SUBJECT TO CHANGE’ seemed like a very appropriate song to find myself obsessively listening to. After seeing Kelsea Ballerini live at the end of February, this song was just playing on a loop in my head; the song is just so fun and the melody is kind of intoxicating in how addictive it is. I can play it over and over for hours and be having just as good a time on the hundredth listen as I was on the first. From the lyrics to the melody to the production, it’s catchy and effervescent and uplifting, and I felt the joy trying to get in (even if I wasn’t ready for it yet).

My favourite part of the song is the second verse and pre-chorus. The verse feels so true to my life experience and it just resonates so deeply. As much as I love it though, the pre-chorus just gets me every time: “Thank God, I don’t know about tomorrow / Thank God, I take it day by day / Oh, I don’t think about the chapters / It’s all about turning the page.” It’s something that I really struggle with – trying to predict the future and act according to that imagined future – so those lyrics really speak to me and the way Kelsea sings them just warms my heart, like maybe I won’t always feel this way.

Favourite Lyrics: “If I’m honest / Growing up, it kind of hurts like hell / It’s chaotic, ironic / But it’s how I learn to find myself, yeah // Thank God, I don’t know about tomorrow / Thank God, I take it day by day / Oh, I don’t think about the chapters / It’s all about turning the page”

I heard Michael Logen play this brand new song at Tin Pan South in Nashville and I was in love with it by the end of the first chorus; it was so warm and hopeful and beautiful. The lyrics and melody were just gorgeous and the message of always, always coming back to love was so moving. And hearing the whole room sing the chorus – “Let it be love, love, love” – was an almost spiritual experience. I could’ve cried; it was such a beautiful, meaningful song. My depression still had its claws buried in me but I was starting to feel like connection might be possible again, that making music might be possible again. That’s what songs like this, what Nashville, gave me.

Favourite Lyrics: “If there’s only one thing that I’m known for / Just one legacy I leave behind / Just one word written over my hearthstone / Just one lesson I’ve learned in this life // Let it be love, love, love” AND “If it’s only one kingdom we’re building / Just one future we’re falling into / … // Let it be love, love, love” AND “Let it be love that holds us / Love that moulds us / Let it be love by which we are known / Let it be love that sees us / Love that frees us / Let it be love that leads us back home”


4. Too Much Of A Good Thing by Madeline Edwards // Lost The Breakup by Maisie Peters

I love Madeline Edwards’ album, Crashlanded, having being introduced to it and its stories when I heard her perform most of the songs at a round at Tin Pan South in Nashville. I loved it on the spot – the lyrics, the metaphors, the melodies, her voice, and then (later) the production – and I listened to it on repeat without a break for weeks. There are multiple songs that I absolutely adore – and could’ve happily chosen for this list – but it’s the last song, ‘Too Much Of A Good Thing,’ that speaks to me the most: it explores the idea that maybe good things can last, that they don’t have to run their course and come to an end as we’ve always been taught to expect (‘you can have too much of a good thing’ and ‘you can only have so much of a good thing’ and so on). She talked about how much that idea had impacted her life and how trying to have faith in the opposite, in the idea that good things can last, has helped her and enabled her to be present in the good when it’s happening. This is something that I really struggle with so this song really resonates with me and the more I listen to it, the more emotional it makes me. It’s simple and sweet, allowing you to focus on her voice, which is incredible, and the lyrics, which are poignant and uplifting.

Favourite Lyrics: “Well, life don’t always work like that / And hearts don’t have to break / And God don’t give to take it back / And dreams don’t have to fade / You can fly too close to the sun / And never melt your wings / And you can’t have too much of a good thing” AND “What if the love you want is the love you find?” AND “What if fear turns into scared of nothing? / You don’t have to let go of what you always wanted”

I think that the best pop songs are made up of catchy melodies, great lyrics that succinctly tell the story, and choruses that drive the point home. This song has all of those things and more. The verses give us the details of the story, of the break up; the prechoruses tee us up for the chorus while making her feelings for this guy scathingly clear; the choruses give us the biggest, most important pieces of the story without sacrificing the lyrical content or quality; and the bridge delivers a fun twist where, instead of winning the break up through revenge or spitefulness, she wins through getting over him and moving on with her life. I really love that narrative. I mean, I love a good revenge song but it’s really cool to have this different, more mature message, wrapped up in a fun pop song. The melodies are instant ear worms and the production pushes and pulls beautifully, the energy rising and falling in a way that carries you along effortlessly. It’s so much fun to sing along to and the hook – “oh, shit!” – is absolutely irresistible. It is quite possibly the most fun I’ve had listening to a song in a really long time. After struggling to feel joy for so long – to even remember what joy might feel like – it’s been beyond amazing to have so much fun listening to music again.

Favourite Lyrics: “I know I’m obsessed and / Right now, I might be a mess but / One day, you’re gonna wake up / And, oh shit, you lost the breakup / I’ll smile and you’ll have to face it / I’m the greatest love that you wasted / But, by then, I’ll be far away / And, oh shit, you lost the breakup” AND “But for now, I’m out in the dust / Falling apart / Oh, is she just like me? Yeah, I reckon / You got two types, Country and Western” AND “So, I’m feeling and I’m dealing with the heart you broke / While you do press-ups and repress us and take off her clothes / Here’s something if nothing else is still true / I’m the best thing that almost happened to you” AND “…and you’ll say / ‘Wow, hey, it’s been forever / Do you wanna get a drink, like together?’ / I say, ‘I’m kinda busy but, like, stay in touch?’ / I think, ‘oh shit, I won the breakup'”


5. Lie Better by Cassidy Daniels // Happy by Kesha

I fell in love with this song from the very first listen. Between the warm and emotive instrumentation, Cassidy’s gorgeous voice, and the lyrics – one heartbreaking punch in the gut after another – I was obsessed and listened to it on repeat, telling pretty much everyone I knew about this lyric or that one. The delicate acoustic guitar is absolutely perfect to represent that fragility of trying to hold yourself together after something has completely wrecked you and Cassidy has this beautiful, highly versatile voice, making her able to convey the heartbreak with such emotion. Hearing her like this was so moving to me because I’ve only really heard her sing really powerfully, an incredible belt that just filled the room, so it was really lovely to hear the other end of that spectrum, to hear her voice soft and vulnerable. The lyrics are – as usual – my favourite part and they are so fucking good. It’s really inspiring as a songwriter. The rhyming is so natural, especially in the bridge: “Wish you could lie better / Wishing that I never / Saw your true colours, wish you didn’t love her, wish you would’ve covered / Your lie better / Wish you could lie, lie better.” And the way she puts the universal experiences of those kinds of life changing moments – “I remember the day before the day I knew / When my forever was still forever with you,” for example – feels so organic but so deeply, painfully accurate. The whole song just sounds so real, like it just all spilled out in a moment of intense emotion.

Favourite Lyrics: “They say, ‘Ignorance is bliss’ / I guess it’s true, ’cause it’s gotta be better than this” AND “Wish you could lie better / Wishing that I never / Saw your true colours, wish you didn’t love her, wish you would’ve covered / Your lie better / Wish you could lie, lie better” AND “I remember the day before the day I knew / When my forever was still forever with you / I’d give anything to just go back / But a heart can’t forget when a heart attacks”

This song is so interesting to me, both following ‘Hate Me Harder’ and closing the album. And, of course, it’s gorgeous in its simplicity and vulnerability. The stripped back guitar really allows both Kesha’s voice and her lyrics to shine and they really do, closing out the album and this chapter of her life – this is the last album on her contract with her current label – on a very poignant note. I can understand why it’s (apparently) one of her favourites on the album. The song explores how her perspective has changed over time, how finding happiness has become her priority over everything else, a tough job for anyone but something that must feel like a particularly significant aspiration after everything she’s gone through in her life and career (most of which has been in the harsh light of the public eye): “If you asked me then where I wanted to be / It’d look something like this, living out my wildest of dreams / But life sometimes ain’t always what it seems / If you ask me now / All I’ve wanted to be / Is happy.” Having said that though, I found it very relatable…

  • We’ve all been through tough stuff and given the traumatic experiences I’ve had and my struggles with mental illness and being neurodivergent, I can certainly relate to feeling like being happy could very well be an impossible goal.
  • I love how the first verse – “What if none of this happened? / It’s nothing like I imagined it / What if I wasn’t this strong? / What if it all just went different?” – can be interpreted in different ways, particularly the line, “What if I wasn’t this strong?” The most obvious meaning is that, if she hadn’t been so strong, she wouldn’t have survived everything that’s happened to her. But an interpretation that I keep thinking about is how it almost sounds like it’s something she resents, like she couldn’t give up even if she wanted to, which is something I really, really relate to at the moment.
  • The progression from “Time’s passing me by / Gotta just laugh so I don’t cry” to “Time’s passing me by / Gotta just laugh so I don’t die” is so heartbreaking.
  • The lyric, “I remember when I was little / Before I knew that anyone could be evil / These egos, some people, playing with my innocence like at a casino,” has some of the most visceral imagery but it’s also so deeply relatable. I’m sure most of us – if not all of us – remember a moment when it became clear that the world was a lot crueler than we’d thought it was, when we were devastated by someone we trusted hurting us when we’d never imagined that they would.

The contrast between this song and ‘Hate Me Harder’ get me every single time. In ‘Hate Me Harder,’ she sings, “There’s nothing left that I haven’t heard / And I can take it, so make it hurt” and “Again and again and again and again, I’ll keep saying it over again / I’ve been there, I’ve done it, I’ve lived it, I’ve fucked it, I’d do it all over again / I’ll take it, I’ll take it, I’ll take it, I’ll take it, I already know that I can / Already know I can” but then, in ‘Happy,’ she sings, “What if none of this happened? / It’s nothing like I imagined it / […] / What if it all just went different?” and “There’s so many things I’d change but I can’t.” The two different points of view mirroring each other is just gut-wrenching, especially considering they are both delivered in such raw, vulnerable songs. When I listen to them, I think of ‘Hate Me Harder’ as the version of herself that she presents to the world, not a lie or a mask but just not her whole self, and then ‘Happy’ is the soft and vulnerable heart that she keeps protected from the world but chose to share with us on this track, on this album. Again, it’s not her whole self but it’s a really important part, especially when telling this chapter of her story. (It fascinates me how much we can learn about an artist from their albums – and discographies – which is why it makes me so angry and just heartbroken that the music industry is making it is so incredibly difficult for people to release them. Albums give you this beautiful chance to get to know an artist, to fall in love with them and become invested in them in a way that singles just can’t. Okay, tangent over. For now.) And that honesty and vulnerability, combined with the stripped down sound to let the lyrics take centre stage is why it is, in my opinion, the perfect closing track for the album and such a beautiful song.

Favourite Lyrics: “What if none of this happened? / It’s nothing like I imagined it / What if I wasn’t this strong? / What if it all just went different?” AND “Time’s passing me by / Gotta just laugh so I don’t cry” AND “I remember when I was little / Before I knew that anyone could be evil / These egos, some people, playing with my innocence like at a casino” AND “Time’s passing me by / Gotta just laugh so I don’t die”

Honourable mention to ‘Pathetic’ by Nick Wilson and both ‘We’re Not Friends’ and ‘Both’ by Ingrid Andress (I love her new album, Good Person, but these two songs have been really in my head because they’re just so good), both of whom I listened to a lot and saw live in May. They are amazing and the show was fantastic.


6. You’re Losing Me by Taylor Swift // Nervous System by Candi Carpenter

This song came out at the end of May and I’ve basically had it on repeat ever since even though it’s so gut-wrenchingly sad. At the time, we all thought it was a response to the breakup with Joe but clearly that relationship was much more complicated than we knew since Jack Antonoff revealed that it was written in December 2021. But anyway. The song is clearly about agonising over whether or not to end a relationship and the imagery she uses to depict that pain is beautiful, if deeply sad: “Remember lookin’ at this room, we loved it ’cause of the light / Now I just sit in the dark and wonder if it’s time,” “I sent you signals and bit my nails down to the quick / My face was gray, but you wouldn’t admit that we were sick,” “And the air is thick with loss and indecision / I know my pain is such an imposition,” etc. You can see those moments; it’s like you’re living them with her. You can feel her resignation, her exhaustion, the heaviness, the anger… She conveys the emotions so clearly, so smoothly; her writing skill is beyond incredible. The chorus is sparse and simple – “Stop, you’re losin’ me / Stop, you’re losin’ me / Stop, you’re losin’ me / I can’t find a pulse / My heart won’t start anymore / For you / ‘Cause you’re losin’ me” – but with the wordiness of the song, I think this only makes it more impactful, conveying the metaphor of the song more powerfully than a busier chorus would. The bridge is a stellar Swift-Antonoff classic that just keeps building and building until the emotion pours out like a waterfall. She questions how long they can go on in this unhappy state – “How long could we be a sad song / ‘Til we were too far gone to bring back to life? / I gave you all my best me’s, my endless empathy” – how she gave him everything, referencing military imagery, a heartbreaking throwback to ‘The Great War,’ a conflict that they managed to survive – “And all I did was bleed as I tried to be the bravest soldier / Fighting in only your army / Frontlines, don’t you ignore me.” She’s “the best thing at this party” but he still doesn’t seem to want her: “And I wouldn’t marry me either / A pathological people pleaser / Who only wanted you to see her.” Those lyrics always reminds me of ‘All Too Well (10 Minute Version) [From the Vault]’ and how she felt similarly unseen and misunderstood in that relationship: “The idea you had of me, who was she? / A never-needy, ever-lovely jewel whose shine reflects on you.” These specific phrases feel so personal, like someone knew exactly where to hit to make it hurt most; it’s heartbreaking. The final part of the bridge is so heart-wrenching, and all the more heart-wrenching for its simplicity: “And I’m fadin’, thinkin’ / Do something, babe, say something / Lose something, babe, risk something / Choose something, babe, I got nothing / To believe / Unless you’re choosin’ me / You’re losin’ me.” I swear it’s impossible not to scream along. The internal rhymes are so pleasing to the ear and I love the way the final “You’re losin’ me” fits into both the end of the bridge and the beginning of the final chorus. Production-wise, I love pretty much everything that Taylor and Jack do together but this isn’t one of my favourites; it’s poignant and atmospheric but, to my ears, it feels a little unfinished. I’d love to hear what it sounded like with production more in the vein of ‘The Great War’ or ‘Would’ve, Could’ve, Should’ve’ (although with a sparser arrangement).

Favourite Lyrics: “Remember looking at this room, we loved it ’cause of the light  / Now I just sit in the dark and wonder if it’s time” AND “Stop, you’re losing me / I can’t find a pulse / My heart won’t start anymore / For you / ‘Cause you’re losing me” AND “I sent you signals and bit my nails down to the quick / My face was grey but you wouldn’t admit that we were sick // And the air is thick with loss and indecision / I know my pain is such an imposition” AND “And I wouldn’t marry me either / A pathological people-pleaser / Who only wanted you to see her” ANDDo something, babe, say something / Lose something, babe, risk something / Choose something, babe, I got nothing  / To believe, unless you’re choosing me / You’re losing me”

I love Candi Carpenter and I could’ve chosen several from their EP for this slot; I relate so hard to multiple songs, in emotion if not always literally. But there’s something about ‘Nervous System’ – I think it’s because I just find it so relatable. I’m sorry but there is no lyric so relatable to me as the second verse of this song: “They say that life’s a party but I’ve always hated parties / I imagine a car wreck every time I touch my car keys / I don’t want to go anywhere / I’m a temperamental houseplant / Dehydrated, full of hatred / Cat hair on my sweatpants // When I check the CAPTCHA box that says I’m not a robot / I’m lying to myself and I’m lying to my laptop.” It’s just so hilariously me. And the choruses, both the original – “I have a nervous system / I’m nervous all time / I’m a lot like Hannibal, I’m just a cannibal / Eating myself alive / I have a nervous system” – and the extended final chorus – “These are fancy words // For my nervous system / I’m sorry it’s not more organised / It’s business as usual / I’m biting my cuticles / Literally eating myself alive / I have a nervous system / I’m nervous all time / I’m a lot like Hannibal, I’m just a cannibal / Eating myself alive / I have a nervous system” – are very me. The lyric-writing is so good, relatable and hilarious and whip-smart and the melody and rhyme-scheme make it such a satisfying song to listen to (and scream along to in the car). The production is so cool and so fun and Candi uses their voice with such skill: it’s so expressive and brings so much emotion… and just life to every track.

Favourite Lyrics: “I have a nervous system / I’m nervous all the time / I’m a lot like Hannibal / I’m just a cannibal / Eating myself alive / I have a nervous system” AND “I don’t want to go anywhere / I’m a temperamental houseplant / Dehydrated, full of hatred / Cat hair on my sweatpants” AND “When I check the CAPTCHA box that says I’m not a robot / I’m lying to myself and I’m lying to my laptop / I don’t wanna hand this down, I’m afraid to reproduce / I wonder if Sigmund Freud turned into his dad too” AND “These are fancy words // For my nervous system / I’m sorry it’s not more organised / It’s business as usual / I’m biting my cuticles / Literally eating myself alive / I have a nervous system”


7. History of Man by Maisie Peters // Castles Crumbling (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault) by Taylor Swift

It’s safe to say that I’m obsessed with this album. It was so hard to choose just one to include here but the closer, ‘History of Man,’ is so powerful that I need to write about it. I love the muted production and the way it builds throughout the song but the lyrics are what really stand out (and I learned later that she wrote a lot of it just sitting at a piano, having decided not to write a song). There’s a lot in it but she seems to be telling the story of how, as hard as she tried, she couldn’t break the cycle of heartbreak that is as old as man itself; even pleading with the gods, that cycle can never be broken or rewritten. Before its release, she also described it like this: “This song is about so many things it’s hard to even distill into a tarot card paragraph. It’s about the power I feel as a songwriter, and the deep true magic I believe exists within love, even when that love has been lost. I wanted it to be the album closer because it encapsulates a lot of the themes I explore within [The Good Witch], but also because it sums up a large part of the feminine experience as I have felt it. This song feels deep and complex and important, like something bigger than me perhaps.” Throughout the song, she references history, mythology, bible stories, and symbolism to describe the break up of a relationship and the realisation that this story is so much older and bigger than she is, that hers is just the latest in an endless cycle. In the first verse, she establishes just how old love and heartbreak are and how, people have been falling in and out of love for as long as people have existed, through the biggest and smallest days in history: “Tale as old as honey / A moment everybody knows / Yeah, I’m sure there was heartbreak / Inside the walls of Jericho.” At the same time, she introduces her story, asking how her partner could just fall out of love with her, how he could hurt her so badly having loved her so much: “I couldn’t believe it / How you could just stop wanting me? / You burnt down Easter Island / As if it wasn’t sacred, as if it wasn’t sacred to me.” The imagery is beautiful and the references to all of these big, historic images give the song a powerful atmosphere and magnitude. In the chorus, she comes to the realisation that, no matter how hard she tries, this is something she can’t change: “I’ve seen it, in the poems and the sands / I’ve pleaded, with the powers and their plans / I tried to rewrite it but I can’t / It’s the history, the history of man.” This story of love and heartbreak has happened millions of times, a story that repeats over and over again: “She stays up, he’s sleeping like a lamb / She begs him, he says he doesn’t understand / She loves him, more than anyone ever has in the history, the history of man / It’s the history of man.” This is a burden shared by women, one that men just can’t understand, which makes the title – ‘History of Man’ – both ironic and heartbreaking. In the second verse, she seems to reference the story of Orpheus and Eurydice, where he must walk out of the Underworld without looking back in order to save her but he can’t resist looking and damns her to hell. The lyrics “You didn’t even falter / Didn’t look back once, did you?” seem to imply that he walked out easily, that he wasn’t even tempted to look back because he didn’t care, an idea she reinforces with the later lyric, “You walked out, oh / Without sweating.” She also references the story of Samson and Delilah – “So Samson blamed Delilah, but given half the chance I / I would have made him weaker too” – where Delilah betrayed Samson by cutting his hair and costing him his power. On Twitter, Maisie wrote that the lyrics referred to how she wished she could’ve made someone weaker so that they wouldn’t have left “as callously as they did.” She understands why Delilah acted as she did and would’ve done the same. It’s also interesting that Samson “blamed” Delilah when it was he who actually gave her the ability to hurt him, by sharing his secret, and could be interpreted to mean that this person had never shared enough of themself with Maisie to even let her hurt them. After another chorus, she digs even deeper into “the unending pain of the female experience” with the bridge: the first line, “He stole our youth and promised heaven,” refers to “older men taking advantage of younger women” and “the way we want to believe them, the way they know that and use it against us,” as Maisie explained on Twitter; “The men start wars yet Troy hates Helen” describes how, even though it was always the men that started wars, Helen was the one hated because she had power over men; “Women’s hearts are lethal weapons / Did you hold mine and feel threatened?” could easily refer to the way men are so quick to undermine women and to keep them down so that they will always be the ones holding the power, because a woman with power, something that Maisie is depicting here, is something they perceived as terrifying; the lyric, “Hear my lyrics, taste my venom,” sounds like Maisie’s own war cry, that people will hear what she has to say and recognise the power she holds (however the use of ‘venom’ could also be linked to the story of Eve being tempted by the snake and how, throughout history, women have been portrayed as liars and betrayers and villains); and the final lyric, “You are still my great obsession,” could imply that, despite the cruelty of men, women continue to obsess over the idea of falling in love, which can so often lead to pain and heartbreak. The final chorus begins as the previous ones do – “I’ve seen it, in the poems and the sands / I’ve pleaded, with the powers and their plans / I tried to rewrite it but I can’t / It’s the history, the history of man” – only to suddenly switch perspectives – “I stay up, you’re sleeping like a lamb / I beg you and you don’t understand” – implying that this time it’s her story that she’s telling, not a ubiquitous experience of women but her personal heartbreak, the latest in this long, long lineage. As she draws to the end of the song, she sings, “I hold on, I try to hold your hand / I save you a seat, and then you say you wanna stand,” which is a gut-wrenching image: she tried to hold onto the relationship and she did everything she could to save it, only to have it thrown back in her face, which brings them to the inevitable conclusion: “So you’ll lose me, the best you’ll ever have / It’s the history, the history of man.” If he treats her badly, she’ll walk away with a broken heart and he’ll be left alone, searching for someone ‘better’ and never realising that he had it but threw it away. And the story repeats. And repeats and repeats and repeats.

Favourite Lyrics: “Yeah, I’m sure there was heartbreak / Inside the walls of Jericho” AND “You burnt down Easter Island / As if it wasn’t sacred, as if it wasn’t sacred to me” AND “I’ve seen it, in the poems, in the sands / I’ve pleaded, with the powers and their plans / I tried to rewrite it but I can’t / It’s the history, the history of man” AND “He stole our youth and promised heaven / The men start wars yet Troy hates Helen / Women’s hearts are lethal weapons / Did you hold mine and feel threatened? / Hear my lyrics, taste my venom / You are still my great obsession” AND “I hold on, I try to hold your hand / I save you a seat, and then you say you wanna stand / So you’ll lose me, the best you’ll ever have / It’s the history, the history of man”

I love multiple vault tracks on this rerecording but I’m pretty sure ‘Castles Crumbling (Taylor’s Version) (From The Vault)’ is my favourite. It’s a beautifully written song with a really strong, powerful metaphor, one that is heartbreakingly similar to the one that Taylor uses in ‘Long Live.’ But rather than triumphant and euphoric, the imagery is haunting and atmospheric, with lyrics like: “Once, I had an empire in a golden age” and “And I feel like my castle’s crumbling down / And I watch all my bridges burn to the ground” and “Once, I was the great hope for a dynasty” and “Now they’re screaming at the palace front gates, used to chant my name.” It’s beautiful, in a desolate kind of way. The emotion, the self loathing, is so heartbreaking – “I will just let you down / You don’t wanna know me now” and “Crowds would hang on my words, and they trusted me / Their faith was strong, but I pushed it too far / I held that grudge ’til it tore me apart” and “And here I sit alone, behind walls of regret / Falling down like promises that I never kept” and “People look at me like I’m a monster / Now they’re screaming at the palace front gates, used to chant my name / Now they’re screaming that they hate me / Never wanted you to hate me” – and I find it so distressing to think about the fact that, even then – so relatively early in her career – Taylor had so much anxiety over her future; she was so young and so scared and it just makes me wish I could go back in time and hug her. By the time she calls herself a ‘monster’ in ‘Anti-Hero,’ she’s strong enough and she’s shared enough that we understand where she’s coming from, that it’s an insecurity rather than a belief, but that’s not necessarily clear here, coming from a not even twenty-one year old Taylor. The whole thing makes me emotional enough to cry. Her vocals are stunning, conveying such emotion and fragility, and Hayley Williams’ compliments her beautifully; the production is gorgeous too’ somehow both sparse and anthemic.

Favourite Lyrics: “Once, I had an empire in a golden age” AND “And I feel like my castle’s crumbling down / And I watch all my bridges burn to the ground / And you don’t want to know me, I will just let you down / You don’t wanna know me now” AND “Once, I was the great hope for a dynasty / Crowds would hang on my words and they trusted me / Their faith was strong, but I pushed it too far / I held that grudge ’til it tore me apart // Power went to my head and I couldn’t stop / Ones I loved tried to help, so I ran them off / And here I sit alone behind walls of regret / Falling down like promises that I never kept” AND “People look at me like I’m a monster // Now they’re screaming at the palace front gates / Used to chant my name / Now they’re screaming that they hate me / Never wanted you to hate me”


8. There It Goes by Maisie Peters

I love this song so, so much. There’s something about the delicacy of the production and Maisie’s light voice and the uplifting feel that makes me emotional every time, not to mention the absolutely stunning lyrics. She seems to sum up the whole album in one song, moving forward and reclaiming her story, with more beautiful imagery than you know what to do with. The song has a lightness and a freedom to it, that we’re introduced to in the first part of the song, with lyrics like “I’m back in London / I’m running down Columbia Road / They’re selling sunflowers cheap” and “I hang all my art / And I dance with the coven / As the rain falls hard on the street,” resolving with “And I, I’m doing better / I made it to September / I can finally breathe,” a quiet but self-assured acknowledgement of how far she’s come. In the chorus, she’s finally letting go of this relationship that she’s invested so much time and emotion in; she’s letting it go before it becomes a permanent part of her. In the second verse, she’s moving forward and finally feeling like it: “I / Need you less than I did / I threw a party / He kissed me right in front of my friends / I felt so far from the cliffs.” She’s found peace with it and with what they had – “I sleep through the night / And I go where I’m wanted / And I don’t need your light to be lit” – and she’s taken from it what she needed to – “But oh, the way I loved you / I will not be embarrassed of that / Just should’ve known when to quit” – and nothing more. After the second chorus, she tips into an incredible bridge, full of symbolism and imagery, representing starting over and recovery: “A new home, a swan dive / A blank page, a rewrite / A black cat in the streetlights / An open door / The comedown of closure / The girls and I do yoga / I wake up and it’s October / The loss is yours / Brick lane in the brisk cold / And red wine on his hip bone / The witching hours of Stockholm that you won’t see / Sunflowers in the kitchen / No heartbreak in remission / The universe is shifting / And it’s all for me, all for me.” Her world has turned on its axis and the story has become hers again; she’s taken it back. The bridge always makes me cry. I want to know what that feels like, that “The universe is shifting / And it’s all for me” feeling. It’s a beautiful, beautiful song and one that has a really special place in my heart, even if it often makes me cry.

Favourite Lyrics: “I’m back in London / I’m running down Columbia Road / They’re selling sunflowers cheap” AND “I hang all my art / And I dance with the coven / As the rain falls hard on the street / And I, I’m doing better / I made it to September / I can finally breathe” AND “I sleep through the night / And I go where I’m wanted / And I don’t need your light to be lit / But oh, the way I loved you / I will not be embarrassed of that / Just should’ve known when to quit” AND “A new home, a swan dive / A blank page, a rewrite / A black cat in the streetlights / An open door / The comedown of closure / The girls and I do yoga / I wake up and it’s October / The loss is yours / Brick lane in the brisk cold / And red wine on his hip bone / The witching hours of Stockholm that you won’t see / Sunflowers in the kitchen / A heartbreak in remission / The universe is shifting / And it’s all for me, all for me”

Later on, in September, the line “I made it to September / I can finally breathe” became a bit of a trend on social media and people were screaming it during the live show. I struggled with that: I love the song and it just made me really sad because I didn’t feel good about reaching September, I wasn’t doing better, and I couldn’t ‘finally breathe.’ I want, more than anything, to know what “The universe is shifting / And it’s all for me” feels like. So seeing all of those videos was really hard and I ended up all but quitting social media. So it meant a lot to me when Maisie posted this clip…


9. making the bed by Olivia Rodrigo // logical by Olivia Rodrigo // the grudge by Olivia Rodrigo

I literally cannot choose so it’s a three-way tie between my three favourite songs from GUTS, Olivia Rodrigo’s new album.

‘making the bed’ is a gorgeous, gorgeous song while still being utterly devastating; the soft, delicate vocals and production only emphasise the vulnerability of the song. The song seems to detail Rodrigo’s experience of and feelings on fame but so many of the lyrics can also apply to feeling uncomfortable in your surroundings and in your skin, such as “Well, sometimes I feel like I don’t wanna be where I am” and “I’m so tired of bein’ the girl that I am.” The overthinking and feelings of insecurity are clear too, with lyrics like “Every good thing has turned into somethin’ I dread.” It’s very relatable, regardless of Rodrigo’s personal meaning. The metaphor she uses in the chorus, the idea of making her own bed is already a powerful one but, by expanding it, she’s made it even more impactful: “But it’s me who’s been makin’ the bed / Me who’s been makin’ the bed / Pull the sheets over my head, yeah / Makin’ the bed.” Not only has she created the situation she’s in but, now that she’s aware of it, it’s so hard to fix that she’s hiding from what she has to do, pulling the ‘sheets’ over her head. The second verse is one of my favourite lyrical moments on the album and I deeply relate to the part about the recurring dream: “And every night, I wake up from this one recurrin’ dream / Where I’m drivin’ through the city, and the brakes go out on me / I can’t stop at the red light, can’t swerve off the road / I read somewhere it’s ’cause my life feels so out of control / And I tell someone I love them just as a distraction / They tell me that they love me like I’m some tourist attraction / They’re changin’ my machinery, and I just let it happen / I got the things I wanted, it’s just not what I imagined.” It’s so beautifully written and the emotion just feels so raw and so close to the surface; it hits me like a train every time. It’s so vivid and visceral. The guitar part in the bridge is absolutely gorgeous and it may be my favourite musical moment on the album; there’s something about the tone combined with the melody that just hits me like a gut punch. I love it and it makes me want to flip my hair dramatically every time. And the last chorus is just so sad – “Sometimes I feel like I don’t wanna be where I am / Countin’ all of the beautiful things I regret / But it’s me who’s been makin’ the bed / Me who’s been makin’ the bed / Pull the sheets over my head / Makin’ the bed” – the modified lines adding one last heartbreaking confession.

Favourite Lyrics: “Another perfect moment that doesn’t feel like mine / Another thing I forced to be a sign” AND “I’m so tired of bein’ the girl that I am / Every good thing has turned into something I dread / And I’m playin’ the victim so well in my head / But it’s me who’s been making the bed / Me who’s been making the bed / Pull the sheets over my head / Making the bed” AND “And every night, I wake up from this one recurrin’ dream / Where I’m drivin’ through the city and the brakes go out on me / I can’t stop at the red light, I can’t swerve off the road / I read somewhere it’s ’cause my life feels so out of control / And I tell someone I love them just as a distraction / They tell me that they love me like I’m some tourist attraction / They’re changin’ my machinery and I just let it happen / I got the things I wanted, it’s just not what I imagined”

I think ‘logical’ may be the best written song on the album (and, interestingly, it’s a cowrite with Julia Michaels, which could explain the slightly different lyrical voice). The production is gorgeous – I love the piano part so much – and Rodrigo sounds beautiful: hurt and heartbroken and confused. Her vocals are incredible across the album but I think this song really showcases how expressive her voice can be. Lyrically, it’s stunning and I particularly love the second verse: “And I fell for you like water / Falls from the February sky / But now the current’s stronger / And I couldn’t get out if I tried / But you convinced me, baby / It was all in my mind.” The way she weaves all of these water based lyrics together so that they flow smoothly is beautiful. The simplicity of both the lyric and the melody of the chorus sounds stunning and really emphasises the vulnerability, as does the use of such… almost childish imagery: the lyrics “Two plus two equals five” and “If rain don’t pour and sun don’t shine” makes her sound so young, which she arguably was in the face of the break up. The bridge is incredible and so, so vulnerable (I’m honestly amazed that she released it): “‘Cause lovin’ you is lovin’ every / Argument you held over my head / Brought up the girls you could have instead / Said I was too young, I was too soft / Can’t take a joke, can’t get you off / Oh, why do I do this?” And it’s so well-written: you can hear his systematic and undermining attack on her, hammering on every insecurity and soft spot. You can hear the cruelty and you can hear her anguish and humiliation. And as heartbreaking as that is, it’s the outro, I think, that reveals the core of the pain: “Oh, logical, logical, love is never logical / I know I’m half responsible and that makes me feel horrible / Oh, logical, logical, love is never logical / I know I could’ve stopped it all, God, why didn’t I stop it all?” The first part hits like a gut punch and the second part is worse; it’s gut-wrenching to listen to. To hear her question why she let it happen, why she didn’t stop it before it got to that point, when he was the one who hurt her is devastating. But I get it; I’ve been there and something like that really messes with your head, making it really, really hard to untangle the feelings from the facts.

Favourite Lyrics: “Come for me like a saviour / And I’d put myself through hell for you” AND “And I fell for you like water / Falls from the February sky / But now the current’s stronger / No, I couldn’t get out if I triedBut you convinced me, baby / It was all in my mind” AND “Then changing you is possible / No, love is never logical” AND “You built a giant castle / With walls so high I couldn’t see / The way it all unraveled / And all the things you did to me / You lied, you lied, you lied” AND “You mean all those words you said / I’m sure that girl is really your friend / Problems are all solvable / ‘Cause loving you is loving every // Argument you held over my head / Brought up the girls you could have instead / Said I was too young, I was too soft / Can’t take a joke, can’t get you off” AND “Logical, logical / Love is never logical / I know I’m half responsible / And that makes me feel horrible // Oh, logical, logical / Love is never logical / I know I could’ve stopped it all / God, why didn’t I stop it all?”

‘the grudge’ is an interesting one; it feels a little more stream of consciousness than traditional pop song. The chords wander a little more and it’s not so tightly tied up. But it’s beautiful and raw, a plea for answers after a trauma that changed your life in every possible way imaginable. I really relate to that and so I find the lyrics deeply moving and compelling; I can pinpoint lyrics like “You took everything I loved and crushed it in between your fingers” and “And I doubt you ever think about the damage that you did / But I hold on to every detail like my life depends on it / My undying love, now I hold it like a grudge” to moments in my own life. While I prefer the verses more from a lyrical point of view, the chords to the chorus are gorgeous, especially towards the end of the first chorus: she makes a transition that is just so gorgeous and vividly reminds me of Sara Bareilles, or something Sara Bareilles would do in a song. It’s one of my favourite musical moments on the album. And the second verse is another of my favourite lyrical moments: “The  arguments that I have won against you in my head / In the shower, in the car and in the mirror before bed / Yeah, I’m so tough when I’m alone and I make you feel so guilty / And I fantasise about a time you’re a little fucking sorry / And I try to understand why you would do this all to me / You must be insecure, you must be so unhappy / And I know in my heart hurt people hurt people / And we both drew blood, but, man, those cuts were never equal.” Each moment is so clear, so vivid: you can see each imagined argument, her frustration and distress over how she never got the apology she deserved, how hard she’s trying to let it go only to still feel so hurt by it. No word is superfluous; every syllable is dedicated to this attempt to exorcise him from her life – to let it go, to forgive him, to move on – but she’s still hurting too much. Her vocals in the bridge are stunning and when it peaks, with the lyric “You have everything and you still want more,” you can almost hear the tears. That feeling, that pain and frustration and anger, is conveyed so well that it makes my stomach twist. The progression within the chorus, from “It takes strength to forgive, but I don’t feel strong” to “It takes strength to forgive, but I’m not quite sure I’m there yet,” really show the growth and acceptance throughout the song: at the beginning, she’s frustrated with herself for not being able to forgive him but, by the final chorus, she’s accepted that it’s a process and a journey and she’ll get there one day, but she’s just not in that place ‘yet.’ It’s acknowledgement that it’s okay to feel everything, to process it all in small steps; she doesn’t have to be anywhere she isn’t until she’s ready to be. Maybe that’s just me reading into it but I think it’s a really moving sentiment.

Favourite Lyrics: “Took everything I loved and crushed it in between your fingers / And I doubt you ever think about the damage that you did / But I hold onto every detail like my life depends on it” AND “The arguments that I have won against you in my head / In the shower, in the car and in the mirror before bed / Yeah, I’m so tough when I’m alone and I make you feel so guilty / And I fantasise about a time you’re a little fuckin’ sorry / And I try to understand why you would do this all to me / You must be insecure, you must be so unhappy / And I know in my heart hurt people hurt people / And we both drew blood, but, man, those cuts were never equal” AND “You have everything and you still want more” AND “It takes strength to forgive, but I’m not quite sure I’m there yet”


10. The Tree by Maren Morris // Truth Is by Maisie Peters // Say Don’t Go (Taylor’s Version) [From The Vault] by Taylor Swift

I love both of the tracks on Maren Morris’ EP, The Bridge, but I had to go with ‘The Tree’ here. I just really, really love it. She sounds incredible, as she always does, and the production is gorgeous; it just sounds so Maren Morris in all of the best ways. The chorus – “Oooh / Do you hear that / It’s the sound of a new wind blowing / Oooh / Do you feel that / Heart letting go of the weight it’s been holding / I’ve made miracles in the shadows / But now that I’m out in the sun / I’ll never stop growing / Wherever I’m going / Hope I’m not the only one” – is so moving and inspiring. The tree metaphor is really tight and beautifully executed and the lyrics are so simple but impactful: “I’m done filling a cup with a hole in the bottom / I’m taking an axe to the tree / The rot at the roots is the root of the problem / But you wanna blame it on me” and “I hung around longer than anyone should / You’ve broken my heart more than anyone could” and “Spent ten thousand hours trying to fight it with flowers.” And the extended final chorus, with the added lyrics – including “Do you hear that / That’s the sound of the tree falling” – is the perfect ending. The song expresses her feelings and her hopes, but it’s also a call to action. Over her career, Maren has become more and more outspoken about her personal and political beliefs and this seems like a really natural progression. It’s really powerful, even if it does make me want to cry and give her a massive hug.

Favourite Lyrics: “The rot at the roots is the root of the problem / But you wanna blame it on me / I hung around longer than anyone should / You’ve broken my heart more than anyone could” AND “Ooh, do you hear that? / It’s the sound of a new wind blowing / Ooh, do you feel that / Heart letting go of the weight it’s been holding / I’ve made miracles in the shadows / But now that I’m out in the sun / I’ll never stop growing / Wherever I’m going / Hope I’m not the only one” AND “Spent ten thousand hours trying to fight it with flowers” AND “Do you hear that / That’s the sound of the tree falling”

I love The Good Witch deluxe tracks. I love the original album and I wouldn’t change the tracklist because it’s so perfect as it is but I still love the extra songs. There are so many gorgeous lyrics and melodies and production moments. There are multiple songs I could write about here but the one that hit me the hardest and fastest was ‘Truth Is.’ It’s just so raw and devastating and it breaks my heart to think of Maisie writing it, of Maisie potentially going through it – she’s said that she doesn’t only write about personal experiences so I don’t want to assume that she has but it’s clearly a story that resonated with her otherwise I doubt she would’ve written a song about it, and such a powerful song at that – having said that, I will refer to ‘she/her’ and ‘he/him’ just for the sake of ease while writing. It describes, in painful detail, reflecting on an abusive relationship and the devastating effect it had. The lyrics just wrecked me, the trauma she went through and how he clearly just doesn’t care: “Time will heal / But I’ll always be a little bit broke.” I love the metaphor and imagery in the lyric “Hey baby, all I ever did was care / You played a bitter game of musical chairs” and this revelatory moment – “I was a failure ’til I couldn’t fuckin’ bear it no more” – is so heartbreaking and a feeling that I do really relate to. In the bridge, the ways she questions why he did what he did – “Did I rile up all your demons? / Did I give you any reason? / Or did I love you? Did I just love you? / Was it useful? Was it worth it? / Did you think that I deserved it? / ‘Cause I didn’t, I just loved you” – is so relatable, for anyone who’s been treated badly by someone. There’s self-blame – “Did I rile up all your demons? / Did I give you any reason?” – and trying to make sense of why – “Was it useful? Was it worth it? / Did you think that I deserved it?” – but ultimately, she knows that she didn’t do anything wrong: “‘Cause I didn’t, I just loved you.” The choruses are so powerful but it’s the final one that really ripped my heart out: “Truth is, you were the blow behind the bruises / You weren’t love and if I could undo it / I’d never have been yours to ruin / You got off with no court and no blame / Who is out there living with no shame? / Who took my very worst fear and proved it? / Truth is, you did.” There’s the desperation to rewrite the past and the pain of being “yours to ruin,” implying that she feels ruined (which goes back to “I’ll always be a little bit broke”); the fact that he “got off with no court and no blame” and that he’s “living with no shame” conjures a very specific scenario that just makes me want to cry, an image that he isn’t weighed down by this while she is; and the idea that he “proved” her “worst fear” is such a distressing one. It’s such a powerful and moving song and it will always be special because of how raw the emotion is; my experiences don’t line up exactly but there are a lot of parallel emotions, enough that I could certainly sing lines of this song to a certain person who damaged me.

Favourite Lyrics: “And that’s real / But it doesn’t stop the lump in my throat / Time will heal / But I’ll always be a little bit broke” AND “Still you believe there’s no wound and no blood / Who took all of my trust then abused it? / Truth is, you did” AND “Hey baby, all I ever did was care / You played a bitter game of musical chairs / Hey baby, I would fall and you would glare / I was a failure ’til I couldn’t fuckin’ bear it no more” AND “And I’ll never get back months of my life / Time will cure / But you’re never gonna know what that’s like” AND “Did I rile up all your demons? / Did I give you any reason? / Or did I love you? Did I just love you? / Was it useful? Was it worth it? / Did you think that I deserved it? / ‘Cause I didn’t, I just loved you” AND “Truth is, you were the blow behind the bruises / You weren’t love and if I could undo it / I’d never have been yours to ruin / You got off with no court and no blame / Who is out there living with no shame? / Who took my very worst fear and proved it? / Truth is, you did”

I was so excited for the vault tracks of 1989 and they did not disappoint; they’re great songs and I honestly love them all (although I can absolutely see why they weren’t included on the original tracklist). Picking just one for this month, especially since the album only came out on the 27th, was really hard but the atmospheric ‘Say Don’t Go’ (Taylor’s Version) [From The Vault] was a favourite from my first listen. I love the dark, atmospheric sound that’s still very much 1989 and Taylor’s vocals are stunning, as are the backing vocals (which also feel very 1989). The lyrics are gorgeous. I love the opening line: “I’ve known it from the very start / We’re a shot in the darkest dark / Oh no, oh no, I’m unarmed.” It feels like such a perfect opening to the song and I love the imagery throughout the verse lyrics: “Now I’m pacin’ on shaky ground / Strike a match, then you blow it out / Oh no, oh no, it’s not fair” really reflects the uncertainty and anxiety she felt about the relationship and “‘Cause you kiss me and it stops time / And I’m yours, but you’re not mine / Oh no, oh no, you’re not there” is so visceral and heartbreaking. The refrain, “Say, ‘Don’t go’ / I would stay forever if you say, ‘Don’t go,'” is simple but the emotion in her voice is so moving. I love the way the melody rises into the chorus and it’s so catchy: “Why’d you have to lead me on? / Why’d you have to twist the knife? / Walk away and leave me bleedin’, bleedin’? / Why’d you whisper in the dark? / Just to leave me in the night? / Now your silence has me screamin’, screamin’ / (Say) say, ‘(don’t) don’t (go) go’ / I would stay forever if you (say) say, ‘(don’t) don’t (go) go.'” It feels deeply cohesive to the sounds and styles and themes of the original album but more intense maybe, more vulnerable. I wonder if that is why it didn’t make the original tracklist. The bridge is plaintive and heartbroken – “Why’d you have to / Make me want you? / Why’d you have to / Give me nothin’ back? / Why’d you have to / Make me love you? / I said, ‘I love you’ / You say nothin’ back” – and is deeply reminiscent of ‘You’re Losing Me’ (or the other way around, given that the former was written first). It’s so cool to see how many links there are both to repeated themes on throughout the album – to madness, to fire, to darkness – and to specific songs – to driving by, like in ‘I Wish You Would,’ and card games, like in ‘New Romantics’ – something that makes Taylor’s writing so interesting. 1989 is one of the albums where it’s most striking so it’s fascinating to see that she clearly employed it as a technique throughout the songwriting process for the album; otherwise we wouldn’t be seeing it in the songs that didn’t make the original album.

Favourite Lyrics: “I’ve known it from the very start / We’re a shot in the darkest dark / Oh no, oh no, I’m unarmed” AND “I’m standin’ on a tightrope alone / I hold my breath a little bit longer” AND “Now I’m pacin’ on shaky ground / Strike a match, then you blow it out / Oh no, oh no, it’s not fair / ‘Cause you kiss me and it stops time / And I’m yours, but you’re not mine / Oh no, oh no, you’re not there” AND “Why’d you have to / Make me want you? / Why’d you have to / Give me nothin’ back? / Why’d you have to / Make me love you? / I said, ‘I love you’ / You say nothin’ back” AND “I would stay forever if you say, ‘Don’t go’ / But you won’t, but you won’t, but you won’t”


11. The Last One by Maisie Peters

I was lucky enough to see Maisie twice on The Good Witch Tour, first on Halloween in Bristol and then at Wembley Arena (her first arena as a headliner!) at the beginning of November. Both shows were really special and so I had to choose this song for my November slot since she dedicated it to fans every time she performed it live. When she posted the video of the Wembley show, she used this song and the accompanying message read: “wembley was a perfect show and a perfect night, a true celebration of the good witch and the magic that has brought us all together. this song to me has always been about you guys, about how we feel about eachother, about how safe and special and sacred our shows are, so i knew straight away the video had to showcase that. i hope u feel seen and heard and understood, and truly reminded of how much love there is and always will be in this universe we have created together.” It’s a gorgeous song, triumphant and uplifting, and I love it so much. The song sees Maisie describing someone she loves, regardless of their mistakes and failures, and how she’ll always support him. In the first verse, she likens him to Icarus: “You’re bright and it’s blinding / Just a small spark, and you’re flying / With your wax wings in a back room / Got my arms out, tryna catch you.” And while many might consider him “a lost cause in Levi’s,” she’ll “always see great heights” in him. In the chorus, she establishes just how much she’ll support him, that she’ll be the last one beside him if that’s what it comes to: “I’ll be the last one / I’ll be the last one in your corner when the count’s done / I’ll be the last one / Holdin’ my hands up / Stood on the bleachers all alone after the crowd’s gone / I’ll be the last one.” In the post-chorus, the energy and imagery kicks up in intensity with lyrics like “If you’re the Syd Barrett of the band, I’m the girl on the train tracks holdin’ your hand.” I love that lyric in particular. I’ve seen the interpretation that it’s about how, even if he’s lost everything, she’ll still follow him and be there to hold his hand; Syd Barrett being used as a symbol of loss – lost dreams, lost youth, lost idealism – and the train tracks potentially referring to a quote about his reclusiveness (“Syd didn’t so much ‘get off the train’ as fall headlong onto the tracks”). It’s a heartbreaking lyric. She continues with the use of gorgeously vivid imagery in the second verse and bridge, such as “You’re a dreamer in a parka / Send a flare up in the dark / And I’ll come find ya” and “When all the floodlights blow / And the sky is filled with smoke.” The final chorus begins as a breakdown chorus, gentle and tender, before bursting back into life to end the song, with modified lyrics in the post-chorus: “‘Cause, if you’re the Syd Barrett of the band / I’m the girl on the train tracks holdin’ your hand / Halfway to the moon on a plane you couldn’t land / You were seeing castles, they were seeing sand / They’re never gonna get it, no, they’ll never understand / But I believe in you, I’m your number one fan / So, after the crowd’s gone / I’ll be the last one.” I love the childish naïvety in the lyric “You were seeing castles, they were seeing sand,” like he can still appreciate the moments of beautiful simplicity while everyone else doesn’t even notice them. It’s very sweet. The song displays such a tender love for the person it’s about, such belief in them, making it really moving. Musically, I love the anthemic sound – the arrangement and production are gorgeous – and I love the little added effects, like the sound of the flare alongside the “Send a flare up in the dark” lyric. Maisie’s voice sounds incredible and the atmospheric backing vocals are just so perfect. With all of the elements of the song combined, plus Maisie’s continued sincere dedications of the song, just makes me so emotional; I’ve cried while listening to it more than once.

Favourite Lyrics: “You’re bright and it’s blinding / Just a small spark, and you’re flying / With your wax wings in a back room / Got my arms out, tryna catch you” AND “Caught in a streetlight / A lost cause in Levi’s / But I’ll always see great heights in you” AND “I’ll be the last one / I’ll be the last one in your corner when the count’s done / I’ll be the last one / Holdin’ my hands up / Stood on the bleachers all alone after the crowd’s gone / I’ll be the last one” AND “If you’re the Syd Barrett of the band, I’m the girl on the train tracks holdin’ your hand” AND “But I’ll believe in you, still your number one fan, baby / After the crowd’s gone, I’ll be the last one” AND “You’re a dreamer in a parka / Send a flare up in the dark / And I’ll come find ya / Somewhere downtown / With your worst friends on the last round” AND “When all the floodlights blow / And the sky is filled with smoke / You’re still out there on your own / And I’m still the last to go” AND “You were seeing castles, they were seeing sand / They’re never gonna get it, no, they’ll never understand”


12. Is It Over Now? (Taylor’s Version) [From The Vault] by Taylor Swift

This song is another example of how great the 1989 vault tracks are. The vocals, the backing vocals, the imagery, the energy, the production… they’re all gorgeous. As a song, it fits into the story Taylor is telling on 1989 – it’s practically a summation of the whole relationship – but given how desperate Taylor was to protect both Harry Styles and her reputation, it’s not surprising that it didn’t end up on the final tracklist; the album was marketed heavily as her ‘single girl album’ and she worked so hard to avoid the album becoming thought of as another heartbreak album so a song like this, especially with its similarities to ‘Out of the Woods,’ may well have tipped the delicate balance she was clinging to. The lyrics are full of uncertainty and frustration as she tries to make sense of the breakup. She still sees him everywhere – “Let’s fast forward to three hundred takeout coffees later / I see your profile and your smile on unsuspecting waiters” – and clearly thinks that he feels the same, that he can’t get over her either – “You dream of my mouth before it called you a lying traitor” – despite how things ended and that he’s using his new relationships to try and find what they had – “You search in every maiden’s bed for something greater.” And when she repeats this lyric later in the song, the situation has evolved – “You search in every model’s bed for something greater” – and he’s moved from maidens to models, which most likely implies that, with more time and more fame, he dated more and more beautiful women, women as opposed to girls and beautiful because they had to be for their job but that he’s still looking for someone ‘better’ than Taylor and not finding it (an interesting link to these lyrics can be found in ‘Wonderland,’ with the lyric “You searched the world to something else to make you feel like what we had”). The chorus seems to ask when the relationship was truly over, although whether she’s asking about it in the literal or emotional sense, we can’t know: “Baby, was it over / When she laid down on your couch? / Was it over when he unbuttoned my blouse? / ‘Come here,’ I whispered in your ear / In your dream as you passed out, baby / Was it over then? / And is it over now?” Both options are really interesting to think about, both in how to interpret the song and how each potentially changes the story that the album tells. The second verse details moments that we know featured in their relationship: “When you lost control / Red blood, white snow” clearly refers to their snowmobile accident that she wrote about in ‘Out of the Woods’; “Blue dress on a boat” seems likely to reference the day they went out on a boat together, which the paparazzi reported with a photo of her sitting alone on the back of said boat; and “Your new girl is my clone” is likely a comment on the women he later dated who looked very like Taylor, as is “Let’s fast forward to three hundred awkward blind dates later / If she’s got blue eyes, I will surmise that you’ll probably date her,” which is a beautifully scathing lyric. This song plays with structure, bringing in the bridge before the second chorus, and she describes the hurt she feels watching him flaunt his new relationships when she’s been respecting his feelings by keeping hers private: “And did you think I didn’t see you? / There were flashing lights / At least I had the decency / To keep my nights out of sight / Only rumors ’bout my hips and thighs / And my whispered sighs / Oh, Lord, I think about / Jumping off of very tall somethings / Just to see you come running / And say the one thing I’ve been wanting / But no.” The melodic rhythms and internal rhymes are super satisfying and really increase the pace of the section. I struggle with the last part though: “I think about / Jumping off of very tall somethings / Just to see you come running / And say the one thing I’ve been wanting.” I know what she means – she’s using the metaphor to describe how extreme her feelings are, how far she’d go to have him come back – but I can never be okay with such a casual use of suicidal imagery, like “Jumping off of very tall somethings,” especially when it’s used in the context of getting someone’s attention. It’s something like this that means a song can never rise as high on personal ranking as it could have without such a lyric. After that bridge, she jumps in to the second pre-chorus and chorus before returning to the bridge and, from there, a messy and therefore highly representative outro that pulls lyrics from multiple sections of the song. Despite the anxiety and distress in the song, it’s super catchy and fun, and it’s easy to find yourself listening to it on a loop. The writing is so, so good and it’s songs like this one that really show us how she grew as a songwriter from this album to reputation.

Favourite Lyrics: “Was it over then? / And is it over now?” AND “When you lost control / Red blood, white snow / Blue dress on a boat / Your new girl is my clone” AND “And did you think I didn’t see you? / There were flashing lights / At least I had the decency / To keep my nights out of sight / Only rumours ’bout my hips and thighs / And my whispered sighs / Oh, Lord” AND “Let’s fast forward to three hundred awkward blind dates later / If she’s got blue eyes, I will surmise that you’ll probably date her”


One day, I’ll actually keep to the twelve songs a year and we’ll all faint in shock, myself included. But that is not this year. When there’s so much good music in the world, I’m not surprised I can’t keep to it but it is kind of fun and motivating to try, to attempt to determine the songs that have had the biggest impact on me in any given month. As usual, it’s gotten very long so, if you’ve made it this far, thank you very much. I hope you found a song or two that you liked, an artist that you want to hear more of. Again, here’s the playlist if you want to listen to any (or all) of the songs again.

I Woke Up in Nashville (Nashville 2023)

TW: Mentions of depression, suicidal thoughts, and a school shooting.

I’m still trying to pull together a post about my mental health before I went to Nashville. I was really, really struggling and even though I was still agonising over taking the Phenelzine again, it was this trip that pushed me to do it; I knew I wouldn’t be able to handle it if I didn’t. But I was still struggling with what felt like surrender, like failure, when we left; I was still very depressed and having suicidal thoughts, not even two full weeks in; and I was fighting some pretty intense side effects from the meds throughout the whole trip. It was not an easy time.


GETTING TO NASHVILLE

The travel is usually somewhere between exhausting and a complete nightmare; I think many, many disabled people would say the same thing about travel, especially transatlantic travel. This year, it was hard for all of the reasons that it’s usually hard – I find airports stressful, I’m not a fan of flying, I find the whole experience uncomfortable and actually painful depending on the length of the trip, and so on – but it actually wasn’t terrible. For the first time, I was able to get a direct flight from Heathrow to Nashville and that made such a difference; I’ve always found the changeover and everything that that entails to be a particularly exhausting element of the trip. I didn’t sleep but then the eight hour flight was – the complicatedness of crossing timezones aside – during the day; I even managed to get some work done on the flight, something that I always plan but never achieve. And having the Meet and Assist service at the airports was, as always, a great help, making the whole thing easier, quicker, and less stressful. So it was definitely better than expected.

Unfortunately, I had the worst jet lag I’ve probably ever had going to Nashville. Usually I’m over it in a few days but I was struggling to sleep, waking up at all hours, constantly falling asleep on the sofa, and fighting exhaustion until about the last day. So that was frustrating and made some days more of a struggle than others but fortunately I was able to manage well enough that it didn’t ruin the trip.

THE COVENANT SCHOOL SHOOTING

We weren’t even halfway through our first full day in Nashville when the news of The Covenant School shooting broke.

I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about what to write for this section because, honestly, I’m still processing how I feel about it; it’s been a very overwhelming thing to be even tangentially a part of because things like this just don’t happen at home. At home, you obviously hear about the mass shootings in America and you do stop and think all of the same things – “it’s a tragedy” and “no one should be able to buy automatic weapons” and “how do these awful things keep happening?” – but it’s so, so different to be there when it happens. And not just in America but a neighbourhood or so over from where it happened. (Not to mention that I know people who live around there; I didn’t know if their kids went to that school or whether they had family there.) It was very distressing and I couldn’t help feeling just overwhelmingly hopeless because more people are dead – more children are dead – and nothing will change. I didn’t know what to do with myself and all of my feelings; here were all of these lives being changed forever and I could feel my life being rocked by that. I was really shaken.

The festival hadn’t started yet but the two shows that I had tickets to that night were cancelled and I know that many others were too. I didn’t know what the right thing would’ve been and I didn’t know how I felt about any of it so I was kind of glad that the decision was taken away from me. That night, I ended up staying home and just feeling my feelings before I had to go out and face the world all day everyday for the next week and a half.

The festival itself went ahead, although it seemed that there had been some serious thought about whether or not to cancel at the very least the shows at the beginning of the week. I think that, ultimately, the consensus they came to was that music is a great healer and a great uniter of people and that, of the two options, going ahead was the right choice. Initially, the mood was heavy and somber and everyone performing had clearly thought very seriously about what they were going to play, what energy a song would be putting into the room and how it would impact everyone listening. The shows didn’t suffer for it though, the performances sincere and heartfelt. The mood did lighten somewhat as the week went on but the shooting was clearly still present in everyone’s minds, reflected in their song choices and in the heart they put into their performances. There were some cancellations which was a shame but obviously completely understandable; there was no ill will from anyone.

It was scary, being reminded that anyone could be carrying a gun, and so deeply sad that I’ve only just started to really process it, only just been able to pull the time together to do so. Having said that, it was really quite heartening to hear so many people – in Tennessee, a deeply red state – rage against gun ownership and criticise the country’s approach to gun control, including some who I would’ve assumed felt differently. I know that tragedies like these, especially in communities like Nashville, impassion people but I’m not sure if that would be possible if people were firmly at the other end of the scale.

I’m sure there’s more I could say but, as I said, I’m still working through it all. It’s a lot to process.

TIN PAN SOUTH

Over the years, my motivations behind choosing Tin Pan South rounds have changed. Sometimes I want to see my heroes and want to be inspired; sometimes I want to find new, exciting writers; sometimes I want to see friends who are playing; sometimes there’s a networking aspect; sometimes I want to see writers who’ve been recommended; sometimes it’s a mix. After everything this last year and the stress associated with the trip (and the Phenelzine), I’ve really struggled with music: my love of it, my trust in it. So, this year, I just wanted to go and see people that I knew would put on amazing shows; I wanted to be reminded of how much I love music and how much it means to me. So those were the shows I chose, the ones with people who I knew would blow me away to aid that. And they did.

It was a really, really great year; there were so many amazing people with so many awesome songs, all with interesting and inspiring stories. Listing everyone would take forever so here are a select few that really blew me away, that really made the festival for me…

  • Lori McKenna – I think anyone who’s seen Lori McKenna once will understand wanting to see her again and I’m very lucky to have seen her a handful of times now. She’s such a skilled songwriter with a really unique voice and some amazing stories. She has a great stage presence and such good chemistry with the songwriters she shares a stage with. And hearing ‘Humble And Kind’ is all but a religious experience, something I’ve said multiple times now.
  • Madeline Edwards – Madeline was an unexpected but joyful find. The show had just listed the people playing, including Laura Veltz who I’d wanted to see, but it actually turned out to be the group playing through most of  Madeline’s new album, Crashlanded, since they’d all worked on it. I had no idea what to expect but I absolutely fell in love with it (especially ‘The Biggest Wheel,’ ‘The Wolves,’ ‘How Strong I Am,’ ‘Heavy,’ and ‘Too Much Of A Good Thing’). She has a gorgeous voice, the lyrics are so smart and slick, the melodies adventurous but still natural and satisfying. I can’t wait to see her again when she tours here in July.
  • Michael Logen – While this whole round was incredible, it was Michael Logen’s songs that stuck with me the most. His melodies in particular were gorgeous and there were lyrics that just took my breath away. I wrote about this song in my Nashville Playlist (2023) post but my favourite song of his was called ‘Let It Be Love,’ a song that was basically about how everything we do should come from a place of love, something that was really moving given how the week had begun. The repeated chorus line of “Let it be love, love, love” got everyone in the room singing, singing together, it was a really special moment; it all but made me cry. I really, really hope he releases it.
  • Seth Ennis – I’ve seen Seth a number of times over the last eight years and he’s a great songwriter, a great singer, and a great performer. While I’ve always enjoyed his songs, the reason he stood out so much this year was the song he wrote about infertility, something several people in his life have dealt with, making it very close to his heart. It was a stunning – if utterly heartbreaking – song (I wrote more about it here) and I just fell in love with it on first listen. It was a deeply touching song regardless of the situation but it also felt like a really beautiful moment; it felt like a real honour that he would share it with us (and even more so since it was the first time he’d played it live). I really hope that someone cuts it because not only is it an amazing song but I think it could comfort a lot of people going through that struggle.
  • Cassidy Daniels – I only got to see Cassidy play one song since she was invited up to play during a round but holy shit, she was incredible. She has the most amazing voice that seems to rise and fall and tumble effortlessly in almost gymnastic fashion and the song she played was so cool, moody and atmospheric and intoxicating (I wrote about her and the song she played a bit more in my Nashville Playlist (2023) post too). I can’t wait to hear more from her.
  • Skip Black – I was introduced to Skip through Kalie Shorr’s album, Open Book, which is one of my favourite albums of all time, cowriting five tracks of the seventeen track unabridged version and producing or coproducing the whole album, so when I saw his name on the line up, I knew I wanted to see him in his own right. He has some amazing songs but I think my favourite of what he played was ‘The Longer I Live,’ recently released by Aaron Goodvin and Ryan Kinder. It’s a gorgeous song with such uplifting energy.

Honourable mentions to Kassi Ashton, Barry Dean, Nicolle Galyon, Bethany Joy Lenz (she is just a born performer), Jeff Cohen, Ben Earle, Jenn Bostic (what an incredible voice she has), Phil Barton, and Jeffrey Steele. I mentioned many of these in my Nashville Playlist (2023) post.

It was a really amazing year with so many amazing people. I don’t think I can choose a favourite round but my two favourite were the Madeline Edwards round and the round with Michael Logen, Bethany Joy Lenz, Jeff Cohen, Jenn Bostic, and Ben Earle. Those two rounds were just off the freaking charts. All of the rounds were good (even the ‘less good’ ones were still really good – it’s just that the bar for ‘good’ was so incredibly high) but those two were some of the best I’ve ever been to.

TORNADO WARNING 

On the Friday night, there was a tornado warning; some of the venues cancelled their shows and the tutors warned us to be home early. None of the locals I spoke to were worried (and neither was I to be honest, having been in town for multiple warnings over the years, all of which came to nothing) but I understand why the tutors were being cautious; even though we’re adults, they do feel some degree of responsibility over us and more so, I think, in potentially dangerous situations that we have no experience of at home, like tornado warnings. So we were encouraged to go home and stay there but those of us who were feeling brave (or just not worried) ended up hanging out together at one of the group’s Airbnbs, having a chill little party. Calling it a party is probably a bit generous given that we just sat in the courtyard in the pre-storm heat, talking shit and having a good time, but it was so nice: at the beginning of the week I’d known one person and there I was, hanging out with a group I was only just getting to know, having a really nice time and just feeling so normal. That was kind of amazing because I never feel normal; I cannot remember the last time I felt normal. So not only was it good fun but that made it yet another special experience in a very special week. Phenelzine was definitely a big part of making that happen but there’s something special about Nashville that has always made things possible for me that I’d never imagined would be.

Even though I wasn’t seriously worried about a tornado, I did keep an eye on the weather and ended up leaving a bit earlier than I otherwise might’ve because things did start to get a bit wild – wind and rain and the air was only getting heavier. I’d been invited to stay but my Airbnb was only a few minutes away so I said my goodbyes and zipped home. Before going inside though, I stood out in the wild weather. It wasn’t any worse than the storms we occasionally get at home and I love storms: there’s something about them that makes me feel so alive, like everything is heightened, like every atom in my body is in tune with the storm. It kind of makes me feel like I have superpowers, like I could control the weather myself; I love it.

So it was actually a really good end to the day and apart from some pretty strong winds and heavy rain, we were all no worse for wear in the morning.

SONG SUFFRAGETTES 9TH ANNIVERSARY SHOW

Song Suffragettes is one of my favourite parts about going to Nashville and getting to go to an anniversary show only makes it more special. They play two shorter rounds instead of the usual longer one, plus they honour an incredible female songwriter with the Song Suffragettes Yellow Rose of Inspiration Award; she gets interviewed by another very cool female songwriter. This year Natalie Hemby (yay!) was being honoured, interviewed by Maggie Rose, so it was a very special show to be at.

The first round was Morgan Johnston, Valerie Ponzio, Carter Faith, Robyn Ottolini, and Shelly Fairchild with Grace Bowers on guitar (she was an incredible, incredible guitarist and that’t not even taking into account how young she is), plus Mia Morris on percussion plus a song of her own. They were all great and I’d seen both Carter and Robyn before when they came to London on the Song Suffragettes tour last year. So it was cool to have some familiar faces and some brand new ones. I wrote about several of the songs played in my Nashville Playlist (2023) post but I want to include my favourites here too. I love Carter’s ‘Leaving Tennesse.’ It’s so gentle and comforting to listen to, simple and sweet but so heartfelt. I wrote in my earlier post that I think the reason it resonates with me so strongly is that, while I’ll likely never be able to live in Nashville – for multiple reasons that aren’t worth getting into here – it does feel like a part of me stays in Nashville every time I go home, a part that I reunite with every time I return. So, in a way, I don’t ever leave Nashville, don’t ever leave Tennessee. I also loved Robyn’s ‘Heart Less’ and I loved the twist in the chorus lyric; it was beautiful and I hope she releases it.

The second round was made up of Jessica Willis Fisher, Carmen Dianne, Haley Mae Campbell, Gina Venier, and Victoria Banks, with Mia on percussion and with her own song on the round. I’ve heard her song, ‘No One Cares,’ but it honestly never gets less funny; it’s so snarky and sarcastic and fun and her ability to play with rhythm, both in her melodies and her instrumentation, is amazing. My two favourites songs of the night are a tie between ‘Giving Up’ by Carmen Dianne and ‘Nora Jane’ by Gina Venier. Carmen was playing bass, which was really cool (the musicianship of this show was the most impressive I’ve ever seen from Song Suffragettes – it was amazing), and her vocals were fantastic. Her song, ‘Giving Up,’ had some really strong parallels to a painful experience I’ve been in but it was really empowering, with compelling lyrics and a bold, rebellious melody; I’m obsessed with it. My other favourite was ‘Nora Jane’ by Gina Venier, a song about the fear of coming out to her family that ends with her family accepting her and her girlfriend fully. It’s a beautifully written song and a story that is still incredibly uncommon in country music; I can see why so many people feel validated by hearing her story and why they feel like she’s telling their story too. I can only imagine how much bravery it took to write and perform this song – with America, the South, Tennessee, ‘Christian Values,’ and so on being the way they are – and so it felt like a real honour to be trusted with her story, with her opening up and being vulnerable.

Then Maggie and Natalie and came out to rapturous applause. Maggie asked a lot of really interesting questions, which Natalie answered, her usual dry, irreverent self; as always, she was full of funny stories, like writing for A Star is Born and a room full of highly successful, highly thought of songwriters all passing on what became ‘Shallow.’ I’ve always loved Natalie for her openness and her sincerity, even though she’s full of jokes and sly humour, and I love that while she is confident in her abilities, there’s no ego: she’ll talk to you and engage with you, especially about songwriting regardless of how ‘good’ you are – you don’t need to be the next whoever to be worthy of her attention. She’s just a lovely, genuine human being – how could you not love her?

After the interview, she played three songs. The first was a new song that was really beautiful. The second was ‘Rainbow,’ which Kacey Musgraves released (the two of them wrote it several years back with Shane McAnally). She’d just played it at the funeral of one of the girls killed in The Covenant School shooting; it was apparently her favourite song. I think, as a song, it’s always meant a lot to her and that has only grown over the years as people have attached their own stories to it. And the third and final song she played was ‘Crowded Table,’ which she wrote with Lori McKenna and Brandi Carlile for her group project with Brandi Carlile, Maren Morris, and Amanda Shires. She started to play it but then changed her mind, unplugged her guitar, and started the song again, climbing down from the stage and walking through the audience as she played. I don’t think I’ve ever seen anyone do that and apparently no one has ever done it at The Listening Room. It was a very sweet, special moment, perfect for the last performance of the trip.

When the show was over, I got to catch up a little with the people I know from Song Suffragettes and I finally got to see Natalie, the two of us not having being able to catch up while I’d been there. We were both just so happy to see each other and it was a really lovely moment. It would’ve been nice to have a bit longer to catch up properly but I’m not complaining; it’s such a long way and a long time between visits that I’m always delighted to see her at all.

OTHER THINGS

  • Hanging out with my Nashville people – After six visits, I have a few really lovely friends, both in the industry and not, and although I didn’t get to see all of them this time, I did get to see most of them and it was so, so lovely. I obviously don’t get to see them very often so catching up and spending time together always feels really special and precious. I met one of these friends on my very first night in Nashville, back in 2016, and we’ve stayed friends through some real highs and lows despite the distance; I feel really lucky to have had and to still have that.
  • Hanging out with the group from my university who’d also travelled for the festival – An unexpected joy this year was hanging out with the group from my uni that were there at the same time. The first time I went, I went with people from my classes so I knew most of the group and it was really fun but ever since, I’ve been going independent of my university; I’ll see the university group around but I don’t usually end up spending time with them for whatever reason. But this time, I spent quite a lot of time – at and between shows – with various people from the uni trip. I only knew one person before we arrived but they were all really easy to talk to, all really fun and really lovely. As I said, we even had a chilled little party one night. So that was a really nice bonus and I made plans with several people to write together when our schedules allow. I also got to hang out with the tutors on the trip, something that also hasn’t happened much on previous trips; everyone’s just so busy. They’re really lovely people and I haven’t seen enough of them since I graduated so going to shows together and catching up in the queues and so on was time that feels very precious.
  • Pancake Pantry – Since food is such an issue for me, finding a restaurant that I’m actually excited to go to is a big deal. I love Pancake Pantry and we always try to go at least a couple of times while we’re there. I’m still not eating very much and I greatly enjoyed getting to eat there again. The Chocolate Sin pancakes are amazing.
  • The Candle Bar – Every year, my Mum and I try and go back to The Candle Bar (there is now one in Bristol but that’s a bit far for us unless we’re already in the area, like Nashville really: we couldn’t and wouldn’t go to Nashville for it but once we’re there, I’m so excited to do it. The candle I always make is the only candle scent that I love – and actually the only one that I enjoy burning – so restocking for the year is always a relief (they got it out especially for us since we’d come so far, which I appreciate much more than I can say) and, not only is the actual candle-making and learning the science of candles really fun, the people who work there are always so enthusiastic and knowledgeable, which makes it such a joyful experience. It’s always really fun, although I couldn’t quite enjoy it as much as I usually do because of the tornado warning: my uni group were freaking out to various degrees and trying to figure out what to do so I couldn’t quite concentrate as much as usual.

GETTING HOME

Despite all of my negative emotions leading up to the trip, I found leaving to be very, very hard, even if I was looking forward to seeing my cats and sleeping in my own bed again. There had been so many magical moments and, for the first time in so, so long, moments of actual joy; I didn’t want to go home, go back to the real world, and lose those. So, yeah, it was just hard.

The Meet and Assist service made the airport experience much easier, as I said earlier and the flight was fine, if quite a bit bumpier than on the way out. We flew direct through the night and luckily, the flight wasn’t full and I managed to lie down with a full row to myself. It still wasn’t hugely comfortable and the sleep I got was more like a series of light naps but it was definitely better than I would’ve gotten had I been sitting up in a single chair. Having said that, being in that one position with my legs bent for so long meant that I almost couldn’t get up when we landed; I’ve never needed the airport wheelchair so much. We had some problems getting a coach back but then finally – finally – we were home. I don’t think I’ve ever been so excited to walk through my own front door (yes, I’m aware of how conflicted my feelings were and are).

I had hoped to go out in the evening – I thought it might actually help stave off the jet lag – but I was asleep within about ten minutes of sitting down on the sofa, where I slept on and off for the rest of the afternoon and evening, despite Mum’s attempts to wake me up. The thought that I’d ever have made it out to London (and back) was laughable by the time I dragged myself up for some food. I just couldn’t keep my eyes open; I was just so unbelievably tired. The nap completely screwed up my sleep schedule (which still hasn’t completely recovered) but the next morning, we retrieved the cats from the cattery, which was wonderful for me even if they were more interested in  re-establishing their claim on the garden. I’d missed them desperately so I was delighted to have them around again (and I think they were actually quite pleased to have us back too since they’ve all spent most of the days since in whatever rooms we’re in).

CONCLUDING THOUGHTS

Even though I’ve been back for a couple of weeks, I still feel more than a bit floored by the whole trip. There were obviously the awful parts, like the school shooting, and the big uncertainties, like the tornado warning; I was struggling with my mental health and with the side effects of the Phenelzine and with all of the anxieties that always come with this trip, like plans changing at the last minute and adjusting to the way Nashville does everything compared to how we do them at home; there was the absolute exhaustion of doing so much after having been so flattened by my depression. The bad was bad – and scary and upsetting and overwhelming – but the good was so incredibly good. I got to see and spend time with people that I love; I got to meet and make friends with new, fun people; I got to hear some amazing music; I got to do some cool things that I don’t get to do at home; I got to feel normal; I got to feel joy for the first time in longer than I can remember. The spectrum of emotion was overwhelming and I’m still processing most of it and what it all means to me but I do know that I’m grateful that I got to be there; I will hold onto the memories forever.


This post turned out to be much longer than I intended it to be; I guess I didn’t realise how many thoughts and feelings I had about the different parts of the trip (and there are even more in my diaries!) until I started trying to sum it all up. But this was a really special experience. I couldn’t not write about it, not after everything it gave me.

Nashville Playlist (2023)

NOTE: I know I haven’t posted in ages but there are several posts coming, including some that cover that missing period of time.

As always, when I’m in Nashville, I listen to a lot of music, so much that I was hitting overwhelm every evening. There were just so many songs at every show, so many gorgeous lyrics and beautiful melodies; I found it hard to take it all in. There were so many that I could’ve included on this list but I tried to stick to the ones that stuck out to me the most, the ones that I really, really felt during the trip; these are my favourites, the ones that felt the most meaningful.


SUBJECT TO CHANGE by Kelsea Ballerini (Written by Kelsea Ballerini, Karen Fairchild, and Alyssa Vanderheym)

Pretty much ever since I saw Kelsea live in February, this song has been playing in the background of my brain. It’s so catchy and so uplifting, from the lyrics to the melody to the production. The second verse and pre-chorus have always been particularly moving for me: the verse feels very true to my experience of life and the pre-chorus – especially the lines “Oh, I don’t think about the chapters / It’s all about turning the page” – really speaks to me, maybe because that’s something I struggle with. The song fills me with such joy that I find myself skipping and dancing when I listen to it, even if I’m in the middle of the street. I first saw Kelsea on my first trip to Nashville and can’t help associating her with it so I wasn’t surprised to have it in my head for the whole flight.

Favourite Lyrics: “If I’m honest / Growing up, it kind of hurts like hell / It’s chaotic, ironic / But it’s how I learn to find myself, yeah // Thank God, I don’t know about tomorrow / Thank God, I take it day by day / Oh, I don’t think about the chapters / It’s all about turning the page”


Radio Silence by Natalie Hemby (Written by Rosi Golan and Natalie Hemby) 

This is quite possibly my favourite song to come out of Nashville. I love Natalie Hemby – as a songwriter, as a singer, and as a person, as you probably know if you follow my blog – and this is, I think, my favourite song of hers. The lyrics, the melody, the production… Her voice… I absolutely love all of it. It sounds like the feeling it’s describing: that shock, that sadness and loneliness, that devastation. I’ve definitely experienced what’s described in the song and from the first listen, it’s always resonated so strongly. As I got settled back in to the Nashville routine, I listened to it a lot and even ended up recording and posting a little cover of a snippet of it.

Favourite Lyrics: “I wasn’t ready for / The way you shut the door / And lеft me standin’ in the frame” AND “I tried to reach you through the growin’ static / I tried to replicate the fading magic / Did everything to keep the signal from dyin’ / All I got was radio silence // I tried to tell you that it’s gonna get better / I tried to put the pieces back together / Did everything to keep the signal from dyin’ / All I got was radio silence”


Diamond Rings and Old Barstools by Tim McGraw (Written by Barry Dean, Luke Laird, and Jonathan Singleton) (Performed by Barry Dean)

This song is one of the first I heard in Nashville and I think, because of that, it feels very nostalgic. That first trip was so magical. I heard this at my first Tin Pan South show ever and between the detail of the lyric and the rise and fall of the melody, it just feels like a classic country song. I don’t know if I can explain it better than that.

Favourite Lyrics: “Diamond rings and old barstools / One’s for queens and one’s for fools / One’s the future and one’s the past / One’s forever and one won’t last”


Humble And Kind by Lori McKenna (Written and Performed by Lori McKenna)

This is a song that will never get old. It will never get less moving. It has this beautifully encouraging and uplifting way of talking about moving through life without sounding like it’s preaching. In my Nashville Playlist (2019) post, I talked about this song and how hearing it live feels like a spiritual experience and that assessment remains true. There’s something about the lyrics, the melody, her voice, and a room full of people murmuring along (not wanting to overwhelm her voice but so moved by the moment) that is just magical.

Favourite Lyrics: “Hold the door, say ‘please,’ say ‘thank you’ / Don’t steal, don’t cheat, and don’t lie / I know you got mountains to climb / But always stay humble and kind / When those dreams you’re dreamin’ come to you / When the work you put in is realized / Let yourself feel the pride / But always stay humble and kind” AND “Don’t take for granted the love this life gives you / When you get where you’re going don’t forget turn back around / And help the next one in line / Always stay humble and kind”


Too Much Of A Good Thing by Madeline Edwards (Written by Madeline Edwards, Ian Christian, and Trannie Anderson) (Performed by Madeline Edwards, Laura Veltz, Kate York, and a couple of members of Madeline’s band)

During one Tin Pan South show, I was both introduced to Madeline Edwards and then got to hear her album almost in full. I completely fell in love with it and it’s been so hard to choose just one song for this list: her voice, the lyrics and melodies, the production… it’s all gorgeous. I think I have to choose the closer, which is called ‘Too Much Of A Good Thing.’ It’s the perfect closer to the album, simple and sweet with a lot less production than many of the earlier tracks (although, as I said, I do love those too – this is just so perfect for the song and perfect to close the album). It allows you to focus in on her voice and the lyrics, which are uplifting and encouraging and poignant. The song contemplates the idea that maybe good things can last, that the idea that we’ve all been taught – that ‘you can have too much of good thing’ – isn’t true. She talked about how much that had impacted her life and how trying to have faith in the idea that good things can happen, can be enjoyed, can last has helped her and allowed her to really feel and be present in the good. This is something that I really struggle with so the song really resonated with me and the more I listen to it, the more emotional I get.

Favourite Lyrics: “Well, life don’t always work like that / And hearts don’t have to break / And God don’t give to take it back / And dreams don’t have to fade / You can fly too close to the sun / And never melt your wings / And you can’t have too much of a good thing” AND “What if the love you want is the love you find?” AND “What if fear turns into scared of nothing? / You don’t have to let go of what you always wanted”


Let It Be Love by The Six One Five Collective (Written and Performed by Michael Logen)

I could list so many songs from this round because everyone was amazing: Michael Logen was fantastic, Bethany Joy Lenz is a born performer and has a stunning voice, Jeff Cohen is a wonderful songwriter, Jenn Bostic’s vocals were mind-blowing, and special guest Ben Earle (of The Shires) was great too. As I said, everyone was incredible and it was definitely one of the best rounds of the festival (although most of the rounds I went to were really, really good). But the ones that have been most stuck in my head are Michael Logen’s so I had to choose one of his for this list and this one just resonated so, so deeply, especially after the sadness of the week. With everyone singing the repeated line of the chorus – “Let it be love, love, love” – I could’ve cried because it just felt so powerful, everyone in the room connected by love, by music, by this fierce hope that things can and will get better, that we can make them better. It was just really moving, almost like a spiritual experience, and I don’t think I’ll ever forget it.

Favourite Lyrics: “If there’s only one thing that I’m known for / Just one legacy I leave behind / Just one word written over my hearthstone / Just one lesson I’ve learned in this life // Let it be love, love, love” AND “If it’s only one kingdom we’re building / Just one future we’re falling into / … // Let it be love, love, love” AND “Let it be love that holds us / Love that moulds us / Let it be love by which we are known / Let it be love that sees us / Love that frees us / Let it be love that leads us back home”


One Pink Line by Seth Ennis (Written by Seth Ennis, Cameron Bedell, and Lauren McLamb) (Performed by Seth Ennis)

Before playing this song, Seth Ennis talked about infertility, an issue that’s really close to his heart. He talked about how his parents had struggled with it and how one of his best friends was too and how that had inspired this song, how he’d written it for them. He’d never played it before but it was just beautiful. I’m not generally a fan of songs that are religious or are written as if speaking to God but I think it’s fair to say that many religious people who struggle with issues like infertility do question God when going through things like this. And you obviously don’t have to be religious to struggle with the ‘why’ of struggles like these. So it fits the circumstances here and is very poignant in this context. The imagery was vivid and heartbreaking; it felt very simple but certainly not boring, just letting the lyrics shine. And while it would make a nice story, I’m kind of glad that it didn’t have a happy ending because the difficult parts of life often don’t just magically resolve themselves; we have to muddle our way through and out of them in whatever way works best for us (which, of course, is different for each of us). We don’t always get a ‘why.’ I hope someone releases it because I think it could help a lot of people going through that kind of hard time.

Favourite Lyrics: “I can’t take one more ‘What are y’all waiting for?’ / One more night of her crying on the bathroom floor / So here I am // I know I’m not supposed to ask you why / And I know you’ve got a plan and it’s all in your time / If you only ever answer one more prayer I send up to the sky, just one time / Could you let her see more than one pink like?” AND “She was smiling when her little sister’s boy turned two years old / But I’m the only one who knows she cried that whole way home / And it breaks me when her heart breaks but nothing kills me / Like knowing how good a mama that woman would be” AND “And I’ll paint the room and I’ll build the crib / But you put a little heartbeat in it / That part’s out of my hands / And help me out here, man”


Crazy Love by Cassidy Daniels (Written by Cassidy Daniels and Unknown) (Performed by Cassidy Daniels) 

Cassidy Daniels was the special guest at this round and came on stage to sing this song. She was funny and engaging and then she started to sing and oh my god, she blew the roof off The Listening Room. She has an absolutely amazing voice, truly, truly incredible. The song was deeply atmospheric and lyrics paint a dark but emotive picture. The melody climbs and falls; it has this almost lazy, organic movement that really fits her voice – it’s easy to imagine someone dancing to it or performing a gymnastics routine with it in the background – and matches the moody energy.

Favourite Lyrics: “I’ll show you crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy love / The kind I know that you’ve be dreaming of / Yeah, baby, if you’re all in / And you give it all you got then / I’ll show you crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy love”


The Longer I Live (feat. Ryan Kinder) by Aaron Goodvin (Written by Skip Black, Ryan Kinder, and Erin Goodman) (Performed by Skip Black)

I knew I wanted to see Skip Black since he’s done so much work with Kalie Shorr, who I absolutely love (and I love the songs that they’ve written together), and the whole round was good but Skip was my favourite and this was my favourite song that he played. Like ‘Humble And Kind’ and ‘Let It Be Love,’ it’s a song that looks at life and passes on the most important lessons learned without preaching or patronising. It feels honest and sincere and generous. It’s like all of the best country songs: they’re the ones we pass down and pass on because they connect us to each other. That’s where I’ve always felt the deepest spirituality and it’s songs like this where I feel that most profoundly.

Favourite Lyrics: “The longer I live, the more I’m alive” AND “The longer I live, the more I learn / How to just be patient waiting my turn / We all got dreams to chase, it ain’t a race / Ain’t about coming in first / The longer I live, the more I learn” AND “The longer I live, the less I need / All the people telling me who to be / I finally understand / That who I am works just fine for me / The longer I live, the less I need” AND “The longer I live, the more I love”


What Hurts The Most by Rascal Flatts (Written by Jeffrey Steele and Steve Robson) (Performed by Jeffrey Steele)

I talked about this song in last year’s Nashville Playlist post: “Somewhat hilariously, the first version of this song that I heard – in my Dad’s car – was the more dance/club version. I have no idea why my Dad had it on a CD but hearing it still brings back fond memories. Hearing the country version for the first time was a bit of a surprise but given the memories of my Dad, I have a soft spot for it and hearing Jeffrey Steele perform it was incredible. He’s an amazing singer and an amazing guitarist; it was a bit like the musical equivalent of a religious experience.” All of this was very true for hearing it this time but he also told the story behind it, the writing process and the success it had, and both of those were deeply connected with his own father, which only made me love it more.

Favourite Lyrics: “It’s hard to deal with the pain of losing you everywhere I go / But I’m doing it / It’s hard to force that smile when I see our old friends / And I’m alone // Still harder getting up, getting dressed, living with this regret / But I know if I could do it over / I would trade, give away all the words that I saved in my heart / That I left unspoken // What hurts the most / Is being so close / And having so much to say (much to say) / And watching you walk away / And never knowing / What could’ve been / And not seeing that love in you / Is what I was trying to do”


Leaving Tennessee by Carter Faith (Written by Carter Faith, Jen Stegall, and Margaret Valentine) (Performed by Carter Faith)

I’ve seen Carter perform a couple of times now and I love this song so much. She’s got such a sweet voice, the melody is so natural and comforting, and the lyrics feel simple but resonate deeply. I think it’s stuck with me so strongly because, while I’ll probably never be able to live in Nashville – for a variety of reasons – I do feel like a part of me never leaves, that I reconnect with it every time I return to the city. So, in some ways, it’s a really sad song for me but also a really comforting one.

Favourite Lyrics: “I would always pack my bags and go before they could find me out / I would always hit the road before they could pin me down / And when I tell you I’m a rolling stone and that I’m never gonna feel at home / Don’t listen to me, you know better, baby / I ain’t ever leaving Tennessee”


No One Cares by Mia Morris (Written and Performed by Mia Morris)

I’ve been seeing Mia perform with Song Suffragettes for years now, in person and over the livestream, and it’s amazing to see how much she’s developed not only as a musician (I swear she can play, like, seven instruments at once – she even used a bowl from the audience member in front of her during this show) but also as a songwriter over this time; she has such a distinctive style as a writer and performer that it’s hard not to get sucked into her songs (I mean, who else could write such a hilarious and smart song about Stacy from ‘Stacy’s Mom’ by Fountains of Wayne and have them sign off on it?!). But during the show I went to, she played this one, which is just so funny. We’ve all had at least one moment in life where, in conversation with someone, we’ve wanted to roll our eyes and say, ‘NO ONE CARES,’ and this song is perfect for that internal monologue.

Favourite Lyrics: “Oh wait / Might be too late / There’s no one really left for you to irritate // Just now, I’ve reached my limit / Right now, you’re so full of it / Is there any way you could take a minute and just be quiet? / Let’s play listening, don’t say anything / For all the time you waste, all the stories you share / Here’s a little story for you, honey / No one cares”


Giving Up by Carmen Dianne (Written by Carmen Dianne and Unknown) (Performed by Carmen Dianne)

I’ve never seen someone play bass at Song Suffragettes (the musicianship of this show was incredible) so I was hooked as soon as Carmen started playing and I loved both of her songs. I found this one particularly emotive, which was only enhanced by her incredible vocals; it really resonated with an experience I’ve been in. But it was also empowering and rebellious and sassy, which I loved. The lyrics are really powerful and the melody sort of tumbles over itself in a really satisfying way. I’ve been listening to it over and over again.

Favourite Lyrics: “I gave up my platform(?) for you to stand taller / I gave up my freedom so you’re not alone / I gave up all these pieces of me just for some peace and quiet in our home / Gave up my breath for you to go waste it / I gave up my family to start one with you / I’ve done my share of giving and now I’m giving up on you” (I’m transcribing from the video after the fact so I’m not sure that these are entirely correct)


Nora Jane by Gina Venier (Written with Gina Venier, Savannah Santos, and Summer Overstreet) (Performed by Gina Venier)

I have never heard a song about a woman loving a woman in Nashville. Never. So not only did this song surprise me in the most gorgeous way, it’s also a beautifully written love song that touches on the fears of coming out and the relief of the story having a happy ending. The lyrics are simple but really touching and I can see why so many people feel so validated by her sharing her story, feel like she’s telling their story too. It’s not a story we hear often in country music and so I think it’s amazing that she’s telling it. Even though it’s not something that has ever required bravery in my own house, I can imagine how much courage it took to do that and then share it with the whole world; it felt like an honour to be trusted with that.

Favourite Lyrics: “What’s my dad gonna do when I bring you home? / What’s my mom gonna say when I tell her you’re the one I love? / Tell her you’re the one I want / Is my brother gonna hate me? / I’m afraid everyone I love won’t love me the same / When I tell ’em your name, Nora Jane” AND “My dad wasn’t too tough when I brought you home / My mom gave me a hug when I told her you’re the one I love / Told her you’re the one I want / My brother found a way to be okay / And I found everyone I love still loves me the same / When I tell ’em your name, Nora Jane”


Rainbow by Kacey Musgraves (Written by Kacey Musgraves, Natalie Hemby, and Shane McAnally) (Performed by Natalie Hemby)

Natalie Hemby was the special guest for the Song Suffragettes 9th Anniversary show so I’m throwing out my self-imposed rule book; she gets two songs from this show. She is my favourite person in Nashville after all. I love ‘Rainbow’ and it’s easily my favourite Kacey Musgraves song – and has been ever since I heard her play it live at Country2Country, I think it was, before even Pageant Material came out. And to know that they were all in need of that song when they wrote it made me love it even more. I love hearing songwriters sing songs that they worked on that were then released by someone else, even if it was someone else in the writing room, and I love hearing Natalie sing this song; there’s something about her voice that just makes me love it even more.

Favourite Lyrics: “When it rains it pours / But you didn’t even notice / It ain’t rainin’ anymore / It’s hard to breathe when all you know is / The struggle of / Staying above / The rising water line” AND “If you could see what I see / You’d be blinded by the colours / Yellow, red and orange, and green / And at least a million others” AND “Oh, tie up the boat / Take off your coat / And take a look around / Everything is alright now” AND “‘Cause the sky has finally opened / The rain and wind stopped blowin’ / But you’re stuck out in the same old storm again / Let go of your umbrella / ‘Cause, darling, I’m just tryin’ to tell ya / That there’s always been a rainbow hangin’ over your head / Yeah, there’s always been a rainbow hangin’ over your head / It’ll all be alright” (So basically the whole song)


Crowded Table by The Highwomen (Written by Natalie Hemby, Lori McKenna, and Brandi Carlile) (Performed by Natalie Hemby)

One of my favourite moments of this trip was actually this song, Natalie’s last song for Song Suffragettes and the last performance I witnessed in Nashville. I love ‘Crowded Table,’ as I said in last year’s post: “This song kind of reminds me of growing up: my house was always busy and there was always a lot of people around. We were a big, tight knit family (we’re still close but we’re all a bit more spread out now so getting together is harder) and we often congregated around the table at meal times. So, when I listen to it, it reminds me of that.” But this time, she started playing it on stage and then changed her mind, getting up and restarting the song unplugged as she climbed off stage, walking around the room and singing it as she wound between the tables. It was a really special moment. I wish more people had been singing but it was still really magical and I was giddy with joy from the whole experience.

Favourite Lyrics: “I can be your streetlight / Showing you the way home / You can hold my hand / When you need to let go” AND “I want a house with a crowded table / And a place by the fire for everyone / Let us take on the world while we’re young and able / And bring us back together when the day is done” AND “If we want a garden / We’re gonna have to sow the seed / Plant a little happiness / Let the roots run deep / If it’s love that we give / Then it’s love that we reap / If we want a garden / We’re gonna have to sow the seed” AND “Everyone’s a little broken / And everyone belongs / Yeah, everyone belongs”


So there is my Nashville 2023 playlist. As always, I could’ve included so many more songs – I heard so many over the trip that I feel like my brain is melting whenever I try and think back to the songs of each night – but I tried not to let the post get too long. We could’ve been here for much longer, believe me!

Anyway, I hope this was interesting, that you were reminded of an old favourite or introduced to a new song that you like. My full Nashville trip post will be up soon.