Me Too
Meghan Trainor
A confident, strutting pop track built on a trombone-forward brass arrangement that gives it the swagger of a jazz-pop hybrid with contemporary production gloss. The rhythm section is tight and syncopated, the horn line instantly memorable, the whole thing designed to make you stand up straighter. This is unapologetically a song about self-possession — not aspiring to be someone else's ideal but arriving so fully as yourself that no comparison is relevant. Trainor's vocal delivery here is playful and physical, the kind of performance that communicates through rhythm and attitude as much as pitch. It came out in the mid-2010s when body-positive pop was having a genuine moment, and this track leaned hard into that wave with more wit than sentiment. The production has aged better than you'd expect, largely because the brass foundation gives it a textural richness that doesn't rely on era-specific synth sounds. Queue it up before a presentation, a first date, or any moment where you want the music to recalibrate your posture.
medium
2010s
bright, rich, polished
American pop
Pop, Jazz. Brass Pop / Jazz Pop. euphoric, playful. Stays consistently confident and celebratory from the first bar to the last — a flat arc of unbroken self-assurance.. energy 7. medium. danceability 7. valence 9. vocals: playful female, rhythmic, attitude-driven, physically expressive delivery. production: trombone-forward brass arrangement, tight syncopated rhythm section, contemporary production gloss. texture: bright, rich, polished. acousticness 4. era: 2010s. American pop. Before a presentation, a first date, or any moment when you need music to straighten your posture and remind you of your own worth.