![11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire 🎧 [📷: Alice Alinari on Unsplash, Brent Faulkner, icon0.com from Pexels, Joshua Newton on Unsplash, marco allasio from Pexels, Mohamed Nohassi on Unsplash, The Musical Hype, nir_design from Pixabay, Tobias Rehbein from Pexels, Valdemaras D. on Unsplash, Wesley Balten on Unsplash]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire 🎧 [📷: Alice Alinari on Unsplash, Brent Faulkner, icon0.com from Pexels, Joshua Newton on Unsplash, marco allasio from Pexels, Mohamed Nohassi on Unsplash, The Musical Hype, nir_design from Pixabay, Tobias Rehbein from Pexels, Valdemaras D. on Unsplash, Wesley Balten on Unsplash]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/11-brilliant-songs-fueled-by-fire.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
11 Brilliant Songs Fueled By Fire 🎧 features Cannons, Eric Church, Foo Fighters, Megan Thee Stallion & Two Feet.
![11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire 🎧 [📷: Alice Alinari on Unsplash, Brent Faulkner, icon0.com from Pexels, Joshua Newton on Unsplash, marco allasio from Pexels, Mohamed Nohassi on Unsplash, The Musical Hype, nir_design from Pixabay, Tobias Rehbein from Pexels, Valdemaras D. on Unsplash, Wesley Balten on Unsplash]](https://themusicalhype.com/wp-content/plugins/accelerated-mobile-pages/images/SD-default-image.png)
![11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire 🎧 [📷: Alice Alinari on Unsplash, Brent Faulkner, icon0.com from Pexels, Joshua Newton on Unsplash, marco allasio from Pexels, Mohamed Nohassi on Unsplash, The Musical Hype, nir_design from Pixabay, Tobias Rehbein from Pexels, Valdemaras D. on Unsplash, Wesley Balten on Unsplash]](https://i0.wp.com/themusicalhype.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/11-brilliant-songs-fueled-by-fire.jpg?resize=400%2C400&ssl=1)
It’s 2021, so we got to bring that fire 🔥! Back in September 2018, we dropped our first fiery experience – 🎧 Experience the Fire of These 13 Songs. While that list still has ample 🔥 to its name (“it’s lit”), there have since been more fiery songs not to mention a big-time, early 2010s gem that must be acknowledge. What am I saying? Well, it’s time for a new fire-fueled list, hence where 🎧 11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire comes into play.
With 🎧 11 Brilliant Songs Fueled by Fire, we feature some artists who haven’t previously appeared on The Musical Hype, as well as some who’ve rarely graced the site. Representing this ferocious compilation are the likes of 🎙 Cannons, 🎙 Eric Church, 🎙 Foo Fighters, 🎙 Megan Thee Stallion, and 🎙 Two Feet among others. So, grab your favorite snack, some headphones (or speakers if that your jam), and check out these fiery, must-hear tunes!
1. Foo Fighters, “Making a Fire”
💿 Medicine at Midnight • 🏷 Roswell / RCA • 📅 2021
A totally badass band deserves a totally badass start to an album, right? Right! That’s exactly what Foo Fighters get with ✅ 🎵 “Making a Fire” which rocks from the jump. Safe to say, that fire is sufficiently made! The groove latches instantly, while the guitars embrace the beauty of overdrive and Dave Grohl is true to self. Adding to the allure is a tuneful melody, particularly on the chorus, which is quite memorable. Adding to its memorable nature are the backing vocals, giving life to some sick “na-na, na-na-na-na-na-na’s.” Epic start.
2. Megan Thee Stallion, “Shots Fired”
💿 Good News • 🏷 300 Entertainment • 🗓 2020
Who does Megan shoot at exactly? Tory Lanez, and honestly, she obliterates him following the infamous incident where he shot her in the foot in Summer 2020. She goes in, not only on him, but also calls out “a lotta weak niggas” who “hate me, but watch my videos beatin’ they dick.” Shots fired indeed – fuego 🔥!
Also Appears On 🔽:
🔗 🎧 Awesome Songs That Tickled My Fancy: November 2020
3. Two Feet, “Fire”
🎵 “Fire” • 🏷 Two Feet / AWAL • 📅 2021
“Darling, I feel no pain My girl don’t ever change Charming, I like you here Falling, I have no fear.”
Dess gives a nice vocal performance – his tone is quite beautiful. The production by himself and 🎛 Andrew Luce is colorful, with lush guitars (chords), rhythmic guitars, and an effective, infectious, laid-back groove. Fire is written all over this joint – NO CAP!
4. Melanie Martinez, “Fire Drill”
🎵 “Fire Drill” • 🏷 Atlantic • 📅 2020
Where Martinez opts for more transcendence is the chorus, where she seems to suggest living this way will potentially blow up in their faces:
“Fire drill, what would happen if a nuke just hit? Would you say, ‘Bye,’ to your family? Would you post about it? Fire drill, if it all went up in flames one day Would you give your mom a hug before your house burned away?”
Also, worth noting, Melanie totally separates herself from the foolishness which she’s experienced, observed, and sings about. On the bridge, she makes it clear, “I am not part of anything that is hateful / Love is seepin’ out my pores, I don’t hold anger anymore…” Martinez gives listeners plenty to unpack on “Fire Drill.” The lyrics and themes are, but it should also be noted that Martinez sings marvelously, and she’s backed by impressive production courtesy of 🎛 Keenan.
5. Sam Smith, “Fire on Fire”
💿 Love Goes • 🏷 Capitol • 📅 2020
Vocally, Smith is ‘on fire,’ infusing their emotions full throttle (where they’re at their best). The production (🎛 Steve Mac) is balanced, nothing extremely flashy, yet perfectly suited to provide necessary ⛽ for the 🔥. When the strings soar, and when Smith ascends into their masterful upper register, that’s when “Fire on Fire” is truly elite (The golden chorus being a prime example).
“Fire on fire would normally kill us But this much desire, together, we're winners They say that we're out of control and some say we're sinners But don't let them ruin our beautiful rhythms.”
6. Cannons, “Fire for You”
💿 Shadows • 🏷 Columbia • 📅 2019
Beyond a telling first verse and the centerpiece, the chorus, Joy continues to share the plight of love in all its ugliness. “I’m leaving without you, love,” she asserts on the second verse, continuing, “I have no choice / I know I’m being lied to.” That sucks. What doesn’t suck is this record, which is a clear vibe-and-a-half from the jump. Great vocals, relatable lyrics, and colorful production – sick groove, rhythm guitar, and moody keyboards – make “Fire for You” the bop everyone needs in their life.
7. The Killers, “Fire in Bone”
💿 Imploding the Mirage • 🏷 Island • 📅 2020
The pitch of front man 🎙 Brandon Flowers is imperfect and wobbly at times, but that’s also part of his charm in all honesty. “Fire in Bone” is definitely intriguing, though quirky. Even if it’s ‘left of center’ in some respects, the form is pretty standard, save for an additional refrain section beyond the chorus. Lyrically, “Fire in Bone” has its moments as well like, “I felt washed up / I felt tempest-tossed and seasick / But I felt fire in bone.” Some moments are simpler and more minimal early on, making the record slightly confusing initially. Ultimately, however it’s a key cut from Imploding the Mirage as well as a worthwhile, standalone song.
8. Waxahatchee, “Fire”
💿 Saint Cloud • 🏷 Merge • 📅 2020
Like the refrain, Crutchfield outdoes herself with the 🎼✍ songwriting. Her lyrics are honest and thoughtful, with a number of highlights. “And when I turn back around / Will you drain me back out? / Will you let me believe that I broke through,” she sings at one point, later characterizing herself as “a bird in the trees / I can learn to see with a partial view / I can learn to be easy as I move in close to you.” Brilliant! Adding to the allure of this record are the vocals, and the overall sound and production (🎛 Brad Cook). No question about this 🔥 right here!
9. Gesaffelstein, “Lost in the Fire”
Ft. The Weeknd
💿 Hyperion • 🏷 Gesaffelstein / Columbia • 📅 2019
As for The Weeknd, he sounds superb vocally, flaunting his upper tenor vocals. Lyrically, the record isn’t without ample sex:
“I wanna fuck you slow with the lights on You’re the only one I’ve got my sights on Type of sex you could never put a price on I’ll take it off, you’re the one I’ll roll the dice on.”
Perhaps more notably, there’s some controversy. What specifically rubbed the people the wrong way about this song? It’s oversimplifying lesbianism as a phase that he can fix via sex:
“You said you might be into girls Said you’re going through a phase... Well, baby, you can bring a friend She can ride on top your face While I fuck you straight.”
Not the finest moment for The Weeknd; it hurts an otherwise pleasant urban-pop joint. Worth adding, that lesbian reference doesn’t even tackle another dimension of “Lost in the Fire” – a possible Drake diss (“And I just want a baby with the right one / ‘Cause I could never be the one to hide one”).
Also Appears On 🔽:
🔗 🎧 11 Compelling Songs That Are Totally Lost
10. Eric Church, “Heart on Fire”
💿 Heart • 🏷 UMG Recordings • 📅 2021
As suggest above, “Heart on Fire” is a country song through and through. Call it what it is – a country banger! Church spends plenty of time singing his truck, including the chorus:
“A turned-up radio but the static was heavy Couldn’t make out any words but ‘Take Me to the Levee’.”
That said, he also seems moves beyond it, reminiscing on the past (“We weren’t old enough but we damn sure did it / Hat turned backward singin’ ‘Paradise City’”) and of course, love. Prior to the Guns N Roses reference on the second verse, he asserts, “I don’t have a single thought that doesn’t have you in it / To feel those flames again, I go back in a New York minute.” Ultimately, Church brings the heat – rather the 🔥 – making “Heart on Fire” a surefire country bop.
11. Adele, “Set Fire to the Rain”
💿 21 • 🏷 XL • 📅 2011
Produced by 🎛 Fraser T. Smith, “Set Fire to the Rain” is relatively simple musically. It opens with rhythmic piano, similarly to another Adele hit, “Hometown Glory” (19). The harmonic progression is uncomplicated but highly effective. Set in D minor, “Set Fire to the Rain” definitely has a dark vibe. Lyrically, we get that dark side, particularly on the pre-chorus and the anthemic chorus. On the pre-chorus, she informs us, “But there’s a side to you / That I never knew, never knew /… And the games you’d play / You would always win, always win.” Yeah, that’s definitely not fair – manipu-F’ing-lation I say! The aforementioned chorus continues:
“I set fire to the rain And I threw us into the flames When it fell, something died ‘Cause I knew that that was the last time The last time...”
So, there’s no actual rain, or fire, just an unhealthy relationship and some tough but necessary decisions to be made by Adele. Got it! Throughout, we get clear, soaring vocals from the queen – to be expected.
Also Appears On 🔽:
🔗 🎧 13 Songs Where, When It Rains It Pours (Part I)
Leave a Comment