So Much Trouble in the World F☆ck love, peace, and happiness. Give me rock. When Love Songs Stop Working There’s so much trouble in the world that love songs start to sound like propaganda. Not wrong — just useless. When things feel rigged, strained, unresolved, the last thing you need is reassurance. Rock was never designed to calm you down. It was designed to mirror the tension. That’s why the truth rarely lives on the single. It hides on the B-side, scratched, overlooked, waiting. Rock Was Built to React, Not Repair Rock doesn’t fix broken systems. It documents them while they’re failing. Listen to The Who – “Glow Girl”. Unpolished, feral, and completely uninterested in optimism. A song that sounds like it’s pacing the room, trying not to explode. That’s rock doing its job — not offering answers, just acknowledging the pressure. Anger Is Information Anger isn’t a flaw. It’s data. Gang of Four – “To Hell With Poverty” didn’t need radio polish to make its point. All nerves, rhyt...
Really Crap Lyrics There’s a certain kind of song that shouldn’t survive. You read the lyrics on their own and think: That’s it? No poetry. No clever metaphors. No great lines begging to be quoted on a T-shirt. Sometimes the lyrics are awkward. Sometimes they’re vague. Sometimes they feel unfinished — like placeholders that were never meant to make the final cut. And yet… the song works. It sticks. It finds a home in your head and refuses to leave. This is not a story about bad songs. This is a story about songs with really crap lyrics that somehow do everything right. When the words stop trying We’ve been trained to believe that great songs need great lyrics. That meaning has to be explained. That every line must earn its place. But rock music — especially its B-sides, deep cuts, and off-the-radar moments — has always known a secret: Sometimes lyrics don’t need to lead. Sometimes they just need to not get in the way. Tone, melody, delivery, repetition, attitude — these things ca...