I heard you driving in my car Then in a frozen bar I claimed I didn't care for you But your verse got trapped inside my head Over and over again You played yourself to death in me I thought I'd drop you easily But that was not to be You burrowed like a summer tick So you invade my sleep and confuse my dreams Turn my nights to sleepless itch Stuck on you 'till the end of time I'm too tired to fight your rhyme Stuck on you 'till the end of time You've got me paralyzed Holding on the telephone I hear your mid-range moan You're everywhere inside my room Even when I'm alone I hear your mellow drone You're everywhere inside of me Stuck on you 'till the end of time I'm too tired to fight your rhyme Stuck on you 'till the end of time You got me trapped I can't escape your incessant whine When you beam it out all across the sky No I can't escape your insipid rhyme When you shoot it deep Straight into my mind
@@HornedBee I heard you driving in my car Then in a frozen bar I claimed I didn't care for you But your verse got trapped inside my head Over and over again You played yourself to death in me What do any of those lyrics have to do with doing heroin? The singer has stated multiple times its about getting a song stuck in your head, there's no hidden meaning here, dude.
They did an amazing job. FAILURE is impossible to cover. But they did capture the loudness of the song, the energy and some other production techniques. I just love that a band like Paramore is into them. They've influenced so many bands.
Whatever I will write here will be meaningless because words simply cannot express the power of emotions I feel when I hear this cover, especially now when I can hear it in HQ. ENORMOUS nostalgia and the lyrics PERFECTLY represent my huge disappointment and suffering as I was grieving the life-long crush that I had during my teenagehood on the only person I was ever in love with. I know it's a cover of Failure, but Paramore simply nailed it and especially this cover gives me the unique vibe of painful, but the most important and significant era in my life. These memories were something else.
Chris Kats33 The tense is on time... Was and were are past tense. To say “the cover is good” or “his vocals are good” would more accurately represent the nature of a recording.
Thanks for this! Much appreciated. Know it's not about a person but for me, I currently feel similarily about Paramore as described in this song... Feeling like a teenager again. Weird stuff.
@@conart.studio Yes, and heroin. The catchy/earworm song is a metaphor for addiction. Edit: I've been a Failure fan since I heard this song in the early 90's (and immediately bought the album). Unfortunately the band was dealing with *major* drug issues around the time of this album. Fortunately they're all still alive and kicking hard (and reunited!!!), but they've since spoken about that period in detail. Another song from this album (Fantastic Planet) literally has the sound of a lighter flicking on and the bubbling sound of something being cooked in a spoon... I'm honestly just glad they're alive today
Bioluminescent Banana Slug I’m glad they didn’t kick the bucket. Pretty crazy how drugs and addiction inspired them. They don’t even look all burnt out which is kind of a miracle lol but yeah I like how people don’t like to take songs for what they are because they don’t like the meaning
The ending part I could listen to on repeat for hours. What is she doing there? That type of melody in which she sings?? I don’t know how to ask,I’m Not a musician
Is this real?? Not AI? I like Paramore a lot, and Stuck on You has been one of my all-time favorite songs since it came out in the 90s. I’m blown away!
Umm, it's ok I guess. Not great though. Sounds to like a cross between failure and veruca salt. They got the harmonies wrong in the chorus btw. Makes it sound weird as fuck.
Harmonies aren't wrong. They just sang the chorus a bit different notes than original. When artists cover songs, they isn't meant to be just like the original..