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Lyrics and Lessons: Part I

CJHere2Help April 12th

Hello everyone!

        I hope you all are having an amazing day. Music is something that we all enjoy and it can help us get through tough times. Music often validates our emotions; if we feel happy, there are songs that help us keep that dopamine high and we jam to it. When we feel sad, there may be songs we listen to that make us feel that the artist understands what we are going through. Music is a great coping mechanism that helps us feel better and understood. Music has always meant a lot to me, I love deciphering the meaning behind lyrics and truly listening to what the artist is saying. I think it would be interesting to start a series of forum posts where I analyze song lyrics that have a deep meaning and may be able to help those who are feeling the same way or going through similar situations.

Song Analysis

"Lace It" by Juice WRLD feat. Eminem

TRIGGER WARNING: Discussion of drug use, profane lyrics

        I did not listen to Juice much before his passing, but after delving into his discography I believe he was an amazing songwriter. To give a quick backstory to this song, Juice passed away due to substance use in December 2019. He would still go on to have a lot of his music released years after his passing, including "Lace It" which came out in the past year. When the song came out and I began listening to it, I was initially disappointed with Juice's lyrics. As the title suggests, his entire verse was about the substances he uses. I thought that was a little distasteful for his team to release given what happened to Juice, but then Eminem started rapping. While Juice's verse was mostly glorifying substance use with lines like "roll it up, lace it, pop a few to chase it", Eminem decided to flip the script. Eminem spends his verse discussing the horrible effects that substance use can have on a person and how he understands how it starts and often ends.

        Eminem spent many years of his life battling addiction and almost lost. He begins the verse with "You pop some [substance] first, it gets progressively worse. Try your best to reverse, unsuccessfully flirtin' with certain death and revertin' to your [substance] urges. The f***in devil he lurks, lose your best friend he smirks." He discusses how when people start with a substance and then progressively begin a habit of using it. This forms an addiction that is difficult for many to overcome. He then begins relating this to the genre of hip-hop and how many rappers fall down this spiral. Not only do they form addiction, but they make the substances that they use a part of their music, as Juice did in his verse. The many people who listen to these artists, often kids and teenagers, are now exposed to them. This creates an entire culture of substance use. Eminem goes on to say "So many who OD be way too young to go see me. I was lucky, my escape was narrow and do not think that I take it for granted that I'm still here." He follows that lyric by listing several substances that have killed many hip-hop artists to reinforce how huge a problem addiction is across many communities.

        Eminem ends his verse by saying, “Addiction’s like a f***in vicious cycle, Juice we will forever miss you. To the younger generation, I ain’t lecturin’ you, but man just be careful when you” which leads into Juice WRLD’s chorus saying “roll it up, lace it.”  Eminem understands that his verse is not going to stop anyone from partaking in substances, so he clarifies that he’s not just some old man telling young people what to do. The goal of his verse was to put into perspective how many lives in hip-hop alone have been lost in recent years and promote awareness of the effects a substance can have on a person. I think it was absolutely beautiful how they took a song Juice WRLD wrote glorifying substance use before his passing and had Eminem, who has been through a lot regarding substance use, flip the message Juice was saying to promote addiction awareness.

Questions:

What do you think about this song?

Do you have any suggestions for songs with powerful lyrics? I love exploring different genres and artists that I don’t normally listen to!

2
Elephi April 15th

@CJHere2Help

This is a really good analysis, CJ! I appreciate the time you take to look deeply into a set of song lyrics, and determine where the value lies in the work. Substance use, or misuse, is such an important topic to create art around, and I love how the song you chose to look at peers into that world from both sides. Eminem's addition about the dangers and the struggles that come along with substance abuse speaks to the reality of life from the darker side of usage, and that truth from an artist who has earned so much respect during his career is a positive reality check for fans who are listening. Thanks for starting this thread! 

I can't think of a song off of the top of my head this very second that has lyrics that have subtle meanings that can be explored, but I just posted Home Free's cover of John Mayer's "In The Blood" in another thread not long ago, and even though the lyrics are pretty straightforward, I think it carries a message that is relatable to a lot of people around 7Cups. Here is a link to the song, and the lyrics go like this...


How much of my mother has my mother left in me?
How much of my love will be insane to some degree?
And what about this feeling that I'm never good enough?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?

How much of my father am I destined to become?
Will I dim the lights inside me just to satisfy someone?
Will I let this woman kill me, or do away with jealous love?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?

I can feel the love I want, I can feel the love I need
But it's never gonna come the way I am
Could I change it if I wanted, can I rise above the flood?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?

How much like my brothers, do my brothers wanna be?
Does a broken home become another broken family?
Or will we be there for each other, like nobody ever could?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?

I can feel the love I want, I can feel the love I need
But it's never gonna come the way I am
Could I change it if I wanted, could I rise above the flood?
Will it wash out in the water, or is it always in the blood?

I think many of us who come from unhappy home lives ask ourselves, "Will I always be haunted by this past? Or is there a way to move on?" and I think this song speaks to just that. Mayer mentions his mother and father, questioning how much influence they've had on him, and if that influence will remain throughout his life. He also mentions his brothers, and wonders if they can truly take care of one another, or if they been broken by the life they've lived. In the chorus, Mayer laments that he knows what kind of love he wants to see in his life, but the damage that has been done in the past has held him back from seeing that future become a reality. It's known that abuses within families tends to run through the line, causing generational trauma to be passed down from parent to child again and again, and Mayer recognizes this, writing "does a broken home become another broken family?" The song, however, doesn't leave you with the taste that he's lost hope for a better future, rather that there's still a chance to come out of the wreckage clean, and I think that's the case for anyone who can empathize with these lyrics. There's still a chance to "rise above the flood," and leave the past behind.

1 reply
CJHere2Help OP April 15th

@Elephi

Heya Elephi! Thank you for sharing this amazing song. It's not something I would typically listen to, but I really vibed with it. I'm currently sitting outside right now enjoying the nice weather, and this song is very soothing. I love how the artist starts out in pure acapella and then then they begin harmonizing as the beat comes in. Very beautiful song, and I enjoyed your analysis. Many people have similar thoughts and it can be difficult for them to move forward since generational trauma is very severe. We tend to be byproducts of our environments and it takes a lot of willpower to deviate from that. His line "rise above the flood" is a great metaphor for leaving the past behind and forging your own path toward the future. Thank you for your thoughtful response :)

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