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What Does The Song What

What does the song Royals by Lorde mean?

On the face of it, it's a straightforward sendup of pop culture's materialist fetish. She namedrops markers of excess like a rap song, then shrugs:But every song's like gold teeth, Grey Goose, trippin' in the bathroomBlood stains, ball gowns, trashin' the hotel roomWe don't care, we're driving Cadillacs in our dreamsBut everybody's like Cristal, Maybach, diamonds on your timepieceJet planes, islands, tigers on a gold leashWe don't care, we aren't caught up in your love affairShe's neither proud nor ashamed of her unremarkable upbringing - she doesn't want to play the game of being defined by social class, she just wants to celebrate the joy of carefree youth. It's a populist anthem of the Common People variety, it's the girl that wasn't and couldn't and now wants to let the listener into the party rather than become complicit in the ogling of exclusionary lifestyles.I've never seen a diamond in the fleshI cut my teeth on wedding rings in the moviesAnd I'm not proud of my addressIn the torn up town, no post code envyMy friends and I we've cracked the codeWe count our dollars on the train to the partyAnd everyone who knows us knowsThat we're fine with this, we didn't come from moneyIt would have been easy for the video to add a sheen to blue-collar fun, Lorde and her friends laughing and looking beautiful on the train. Instead it's anti-glamour, consciously sparse and banal. When there are palm trees and pools, they're cast under the same dull sky. Still, there's a lot of sting left from growing up outside the popular fantasy, and when she turns around and rejects it, she embraces a different kind of status - adoration, cultural cachet, the glow of superiority to the petty and superficial. It's a celebration that's economically inclusive but still in love with stardom, a daydream with her and her crew firmly at the center -That kind of luxe just ain't for usWe crave a different kind of buzzLet me be your ruler, you can call me Queen BeeAnd baby I'll rule (I'll rule I'll rule I'll rule...)Let me live that fantasyWe're bigger than we ever dreamed, and I'm in love with being queen.Mostly, it's just an elegant piece of electro-pop by a great producer and a disenfranchised 16-year-old New Zealander, a girl who had neither the lyrical themes nor camera-ready looks for mainstream success but is earning it anyway.

In the song What Does the Fox Say, what does the fox say?

The entire song is gibberish especially when it comes to the fox saying gibberish bits. However in the end the artist claims that he himself doesn’t know how the fox actually sounds like deep in the woods.During each chorus, the song offers several increasingly absurd possibilities for the fox's sound such as "gering-ding-ding-ding-dingeringeding!" and in the second chorus where Vegard sings "fraka-kaka-kaka-kaka-kow!"The song then describes the fox and the singer's admiration for it, and asks whether it would communicate with a horse using morse code. In the end, the singers float in the air, continuing to wonder what sound the fox makes, while failing to notice a computer-animated fox behind them, which stands on its hind legs and scat sings (voiced by Vegard), answering their question. Bård finishes the song with a melancholy falsetto and the fox leaves without being seen. -WikiSomewhere deep in the woodsI know you're hidingWhat is your sound?Will we ever know?Will always be a mysteryWhat do you say?

Moulin Rouge.. What Does The Song Mean?

Lol PE changing room chat!

What does the words TNT mean in the song TNT by AC/DC?

the words are, TNT I'm dynamite!

What is your opinion on the song 'The Fox (What Does The Fox Say)'?

Absolutely love it! I’m a dancer and a track like ‘What does the fox say?’ comes across as sheer delight.From start to finish, there’s not one beat that you can’t groove to. It starts making you sway from the beginning itself and the chorus just elevates the eccentricity on the dance floor! My favourites from the onomatopoeia are ‘Fraka-ka-ka-ka-ka-ka-ka-kow’ and ‘Hatee-hatee-hatee-ho’. The best part of the song is ‘Ho-o-o-o-orse’ and I do a million steps when that plays!The lyrics are unapologetically original and that’s what I love about the duo. They’ve made it not just a catchy dance number but also funny! The second verse always has me in splits because describing a fox so affectionately is unheard of! The first verse is an obvious treat because no one ever focussed so much on what sounds animals make! It’s impressively bizarre, unique and fresh. Did I mention highly entertaining and put on repeat?The music video is another thing that everyone loves about this song. The theme party at the house in the forest gets you engrossed immediately! Not to mention the superb music. You see the duo dressed as foxes and the choreography is bang on! It’s hilariously pleasing. Another aspect that I love is that the lyrics are not serious but are sung very seriously, adding to the humour. A stereoscopic fox dances on its feet like a human in the end.This song came out years ago but it still sounds new (and outstanding!) every time I hear it, possibly because of its unique theme. It’s one of those tracks that get stuck in your head, forever.

What does the song "Hotel California" mean?

mirrors on the ceiling and the pink champagne on ice and she said we are all just prisoners of our own device and in the master's chambers we gathered for the feast they stab it with their steeley knives but they just can't kill the best last thing i remembered i was running for the door i had to find the passage back to the place i was before relax said the night man we are programmed to receive you can check out any time you like but you can never leave

There's the lyrics to the last part of the song. What does it mean? I think it has something to do with drugs.

What does the song "Dark Horse" by Katy Perry mean?

The expression "dark horse" is from US politics, where it refers to an unknown  political candidate with little apparent chance of winning an office he's running for.This song/video doesn't use the expression in the same sense at all, and it's not clear to me if the songwriter actually knows the generally accepted sense.  The better term here could be "maneater", which is a dated term for a woman who deliberately attracts and harms men emotionally.  Just about any insulting word for women could be substituted.  She is basically warning the men that loving her is dangerous to them.  It's a cheesy concept for a song.  The song is terrible and the video is worse, but that seems to be necessary for a pop song to get attention these days.

What does the words "get down with opp" mean in the song?

...yes indeed...and the group was Naughty By Nature.

There is a police force in our area called the OPP (Ontario Provincial Police) and ever since that song came out whenever we are driving and see one of their police cars we break out into the OPP chorus of the song!

:)

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