The News
Paramore
Paramore have always been a band in conversation with themselves — constantly interrogating their own sound, their own sincerity — and this track is one of the clearest examples of that restlessness finding its form. It enters on a propulsive, almost jittery groove, guitars and synths sharing space in a way that feels distinctly contemporary while still rooted in Hayley Williams's rock lineage. Her vocal here is controlled fury — she's not screaming, but the precision of her delivery suggests someone who has learned to weaponize calm. The song turns its attention to the overwhelming, nauseating quality of living inside the 24-hour news cycle, the way atrocity becomes content becomes scroll becomes numbness, and the shame and helplessness that accumulates when you can't tell if your empathy is genuine or performed. It's a song about moral vertigo, about the gap between feeling and action, and it doesn't offer resolution — instead it sits in the discomfort with an almost punk insistence that the discomfort is real and worth naming. The rhythm never lets up, mirroring the relentlessness it's critiquing. You'd find yourself reaching for this driving to work on a morning when the headlines are too heavy, or whenever you need someone to articulate the specific exhaustion of trying to care in an era engineered to overwhelm caring.
fast
2020s
jittery, propulsive, dense
American
Rock, Alternative. Alt-Rock. anxious, defiant. Controlled fury sustains through a relentless groove, naming moral vertigo without offering resolution.. energy 8. fast. danceability 6. valence 4. vocals: controlled female, precision fury, weaponized calm, rock lineage. production: guitars and synths sharing space, propulsive groove, contemporary production. texture: jittery, propulsive, dense. acousticness 2. era: 2020s. American. Driving to work on a morning when the headlines are too heavy and you need someone to articulate the exhaustion of caring.