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13 Songs That Feature Names, Vol. 3 features music courtesy of Armani White, Father John Misty, Joesef, Megan Thee Stallion, Taylor Swift, and The 1975.
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Names, names, names. That is the focal point of the 11th musical compendium published on The Musical Hype in the year of our lord, 2023. Cutting straight to the chase and getting right into it, 🎧 13 Songs That Feature Names, Vol. 3 arrives a long-awaited sequel to 🎧 13 Songs That Feature Names in Their Title (2020) and 🎧 13 More Songs That Feature Names in Their Titles (also 2020). 🎧 13 Songs That Feature Names, Vol. 3 features music courtesy of 🎙 Armani White, 🎙 Father John Misty, 🎙 Joesef, 🎙 Megan Thee Stallion, 🎙 Taylor Swift, and 🎙 The 1975 among others. So, without further ado, let’s dive right into these NAMES, shall we?
1. Joesef, “Joe”
💿 Permanent Damage • 🏷 Bold Cut / AWAL • 📅 2023
2. Father John Misty, “Goodbye Mr. Blue”
💿 Chloë and the Next 20th Century • 🏷 Sub Pop • 📅 2022
“This may be the last time
The last time I lay here with you
Do you swear it’s not the cat?
You don’t have to answer that
I’ll just make do.”
Never change, Father John Misty, never change.
Appears in 🔻:
3. Megan Thee Stallion, “Megan’s Piano”
💿 Something For Thee Hotties • 🏷 1501 Certified Ent. LLC / 300 Entertainment • 📅 2021
Appears in 🔻:
4. Charlie Puth, “Charlie Be Quiet!”
💿 Charlie • 🏷 Atlantic • 🗓 2022
Even as Puth is excited about a prospective serious relationship, he asserts, “… It’s all getting too loud.” He doesn’t want to get ahead of himself, hence, he’s toning things down. A prime example is in the second verse, where he asserts, “I’ll act like I don’t even care, yeah / I’m not going out looking dumb.” Charlie makes his point loud and clear. Even though he’s quieting down, the chorus is big, showing off his upper range and his ability to pack a punch behind his vocals. It contrasts the quieter, more tentative verses, which represent being tame – calm, cool, and collected – regarding love. Besides relatable songwriting and respectable vocals, “Charlie Be Quiet” is respectably produced.
Appears in 🔻:
5. NERIAH, “Fuck You Matthew”
💿 How Do I Get Clean? • 🏷 NERIAH • 🗓 2022
Apparently, the way that NERIAH ‘gets clean’ on “Fuck You Matthew” is to tear her lame ex- absolutely TF down. He ruined so much for her: “I can’t believe you ruined nineteen for me / Then blamed me for it / I am twenty-two and still am paying for it / Bet you adore it.” Ooh-wee! In the second verse, she makes it clear she’s ranked up, including finding “Someone who looks way better than you,” and admitting to faking it with him – OH, SNAP 🫰! Of course, it is the centerpiece that says it all, including the big, bad FU to Matty boy! Of course, NERIAH doesn’t limit her disdain to only Matthew:
“I hate you and all the boys with the same name as you
Continue to lead me on and lead me back to you
I’ve got five fingers and my favorite one’s for you
So, fuck you Matthew!”
What more needs to be said?
Appears in 🔻:
6. Enchantment, “Gloria”
💿 Enchantment • 🏷 Roadshow • 🗓 1976
“It seems like / Only yesterday / I beheld your sweet face / And in my lonely room / My memories of your embrace.” Clearly, Enchantment is sentimental about Gloria – she’s one special girl. “Isn’t it funny / How time can change / All the things you want to believe,” lead singer and co-writer 🎙 Emanuel Johnson asserts, adding, “But time won’t change / The way I feel / Cause in my mind / It’s you and me / You and me.” Johnson penned “Gloria” alongside 🎼 ✍ 🎛 Michael Stokes, who is also responsible for that silky smooth production that’s idiomatic of the 1970s soul sound through and through. What more is there to say about 🎵 “Gloria”? This gem from 💿 Enchantment, the 1976 album by Enchantment, speaks for itself.
Appears in 🔻:
7. Alicia Keys, “Nat King Cole” (Ft. Lil Wayne)
💿 KEYS • 🏷 RCA • 📅 2021
“If you wanna take it all
Let the chandeliers fall (Fall)
While you’re standing tall like the Taj Mahal
Be unforgettable
Like Nat King Cole
Like Nat King Cole.”
In the context of 💿 KEYS, “Nat King Cole” didn’t require unlocked treatment. That said, 🎵 “Nat King Cole (Unlocked)” is another gem, however. It is grander than the ‘Originals’ version. 🎙 Lil Wayne does a marvelous job rapping the first verse. While he retains his Weezy-ness, he also reins himself in, fitting the classy vibes of this modern-day torch song of sorts.
Appears in 🔽:
8. Armani White, “BILLIE EILISH.”
🎵 “BILLIE EILISH.” • 🏷 Legendbound, LLC / Def Jam • 📅 2022
The chorus doesn’t end the Billie Eilish love, or White’s confidence and drippy ways for that matter. In the sole verse, White kicks things off, asserting, “Put it in perspective / Bitch, I got everything I wanted and some extra.” You see that 🎵 “everything I wanted” adoration right there – the 🏆 Grammy-winning, second Record Of The Year for Billie Eilish? There are also rap clichés in play as well, including two phones, being “Flexed out my Lexus,” “Two pistols, thirties in the clip,” and, as you had to expect, “My lil bitch suckin’ dick for free / I got a bitch, but a bitch ain’t go me.” What more needs to be said? #BigMOOD.
Appears in 🔻:
9-10. Taylor Swift, “Dorothea” / “Majorie”
💿 evermore • 🏷 Taylor Swift • 📅 2020
“Hey, Dorothea, do you ever stop and think about me? /… A tiny screen’s the only place I see you now / And I got nothin’ but well wishes for ya.” 🎵 “Dorothea” seems connected to the ladies Swift sung about on her previous album, folklore, to some extent. Dorothea has left her small hometown to pursue stardom, which is referenced in various moments of the song (“The stars in your eyes shined brighter in Tupelo”). Also, apparently, the narrator desires Dorothea, a former lover, it seems, to “Come back to my side /… And if you’re ever tired of bein’ known for who you know / You know that you’ll always know me.” Again, the simplicity, with the consistent rhythmic groove, is sweet.
“What died didn’t stay dead / You’re alive, you’re alive in my head.” 🎵 “Marjorie” marks another awesome N-A-M-E song. Much like “Dorothea,” Swift captivates us with memorable writing (“If I didn’t know better / I’d think you were still around”) and sweet vocals. “Marjorie” is written about Swift’s deceased maternal grandmother, opera singer Marjorie Finley. The songwriting remains elite: “Should’ve kept every grocery store receipt / ‘Cause every scrap of you would be taken from me / Watched as you signed your name Marjorie / All your closets of backlogged dreams / And how you left them all to me.”
11. The 1975, “Oh Caroline”
💿 Being Funny in a Foreign Language • 🏷 Dirty Hit • 📅 2022
“Getting suicidal? It’s honestly not for me,” he asserts in the second verse. That is a relief but there is more to come that further raises eyebrows. “I’m gettin’ on my nerves by gettin’ on my knees / Getting cucked, I don’t need it.” There is a lot to unpack. By cucked, Healy is referencing cuckold, which adds to the extreme of the record. Furthermore, the “gettin’ on my knees” opens up another can of worms, one that seems to have little to do with faith (Healy isn’t religious) but rather sex too (The Genius’ believe it to be a bisexual experience). Giving this fierce rock record more lightness, sort of is the bridge, where Healy asserts, “Oh, I’ve tried to find / Another name a thousand times / But the only one that rhymes (Always on my mind) / Is ‘Oh, Caroline!’” That makes sense within the narrative that Healy constructs, but also, the front man has been clear that was the fictional name/character that worked perfectly for this song. One of The 1975’s best, methinks!
Appears in 🔻:
12. Jack Harlow, “Dua Lipa”
💿 Come Home the Kids Miss You • 🏷 Generation Now / Atlantic • 📅 2022
“I sold them basements out, let’s do arenas, crushin’ / She looking, I’m blushing, I’m lying, I’m touching.” One of the biggest criticisms many have had regarding Come Home the Kids Miss You is that Harlow doesn’t distance himself from a clear influence, 🎙 Drake. I’m not sure that he separates himself from Drake on “Dua Lipa” either, but there’s enough bite to make this one fun. The chorus is entertaining as Jack makes it clear how he feels about the British pop star: “Dua Lipa, I’m tryna do more with her than do a feature (Do it) / I checked the web, they out here chewin’ me up, fuck it.”
13. Michael Jackson, “Ben”
💿 Ben • 🏷 Motown • 📅 1972
Because “Ben,” penned by 🎼 ✍ Don Black and Walter Scharf, is so thoughtful and focused on sincere friendship, the fact that the song is a soundtrack cut in a horror movie about a rat is unimportant. If you have never seen the 1972 film or read a synopsis, it is shocking how different it is compared to this sweet song by a teen music icon 🤯. Jackson’s tone is absolutely gorgeous, showcasing him as the once-in-a-generation wunderkind that he was. Besides bring the tender lyrics to life with his awe-inspiring instrument, the production and orchestration supporting him (🎛 The Corporation) – strings and rhythm section – are utterly stupendous.
“Ben, most people would turn you away
I don’t listen to a word they say
They don’t see you as I do
I wish they would try to
I’m sure they’d think again
If they had a friend like Ben.”
So sweet!
Appears in 🔻:
13 Songs That Feature Names, Vol. 3 [📷: Brent Faulkner/The Musical Hype; 1501 Certified Ent. LLC / 300 Entertainment, Atlantic, Bold Cut / AWAL, Generation Now, Def Jam, Dirty Hit, Legendbound, LLC, Motown, NERIAH, RCA, Roadshow, Sub Pop, Taylor Swift; cottonbro studio via Pexels; Clker-Free-Vector-Images, Maicon Fonseca Zanco, Samuel1983 via Pixabay]
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