Wake Up, Get Up, Get Out There
Lyn
A pounding jazz-funk groove ignites before the vocals even arrive, all driving bass and punchy brass stabs layered over an insistent hip-hop pocket that refuses to let you sit still. Lyn's voice enters with a raspy urgency that feels more declarative than musical — a command rather than an invitation. The production is Persona 5 at its most iconic: crisp hi-hats riding over distorted guitar licks, the track oscillating between swagger and genuine desperation. Lyrically the song preaches rebellion as survival, insisting the listener shake off complacency and act before life passes by. There's something distinctly Tokyo about it — the frantic energy of a city that never pauses, translated into a three-minute manifesto. The bridge strips back to breath and bass before detonating again, giving the song a physical momentum that makes it almost impossible to hear without moving. It scores late-night train rides home when you're still buzzing with possibility, or early mornings when you need to remind yourself what you're fighting for.
fast
2010s
propulsive, dense, electric
Japan
Jazz, Hip-Hop. Jazz-Funk Hip-Hop Fusion. Urgent, Rebellious. Explodes immediately with frantic energy, briefly strips back at the bridge, then detonates again with undiminished insistence. energy 9. fast. danceability 8. valence 7. vocals: raspy, declarative, commanding, urgent. production: driving bass, brass stabs, distorted guitar licks, crisp hi-hats, hip-hop pocket. texture: propulsive, dense, electric. acousticness 1. era: 2010s. Japan. Early mornings or late-night transit rides when you need to remind yourself what you're fighting for.