![]() ![]() I think it's kind of like a funny take on, like, this is dark, but like, when you're, when you like don't care if you get hit by a bus in your life. How do you see kind of the concept of like fearlessness and how it applies to the song, and what is a good amount of fear? Is fear a motivator? Is fear a dangerous thing? You know, a little too much fear and you've got the dark side, you know what I mean? ![]() It just has this idea of, you know, it's like, easy to be fearless when you have nothing to lose. But this song "Sidelines," the amount of times I've listened to it now, I think it's one of those songs that I think just about anybody can connect with or to. Because it just it looks like totally like juicy with drama, which I love. Jill Riley: Yeah, I just want to check it out. And I kind of like, I kind of tried to keep it as true to the demo version as possible, because I loved his demo so much.Ĭonversations with Friends | Official Trailer | Hulu And he was like, "What about 'Sidelines'?" So we kind of like finished it with the show in mind, which was so fun. And then when the "Conversations with Friends" people reached out to me, he happened to be right next to me. Phoebe Bridgers: Yeah, well, my drummer Marshall, who I write with a lot, had this idea, like at the very beginning of lockdown, and kind of like, set it to the side. I mean, if you could just kind of talk about where it came from, and how it came to be. I don't know if you made this song for this new Hulu show "Conversations with Friends," or if it's something that you kind of already had and this was a good opportunity to get it out there in this way? But I wonder if you could tell me about this song "Sidelines." It's really beautiful. You know, this new song "Sidelines," we started playing it here on The Current and, you know, the initial, I guess, reaction is to go, "Is this an indication for a new EP or a new record?" But I know that you've said that, hey, this is you know, probably the only new thing you're gonna release this year, which is understandable, because you're gonna be on the road quite a bit this summer. I've got Phoebe Bridgers with me, Phoebe, how are you? We have had plenty of opportunity to get to know her music through, you know, the two records that she's put out and the collaborations that she's had. And I've got a special guest on the line, a guest that, you know, we've had in the studio here at The Current. Jill Riley: You're listening to The Current, The Current's Morning Show. I think it went something like "Summers come by, summers come fast".Listen to the interview in the audio player above and read a transcript below. Part of one of the verses goes "Cigarette burns on the floor" "Hiding by the lakes is what we live for". Song 3 - It's a female singer singing an electronic song. I wanna make you feel something, feel something, turn that metal into flesh and blood. Why do we treat each other like robots, every move automated? The first line is the start of the first verse and the second line is the start of the chorus: and all the faces that we've always seen and all the places we have always been and all the secrets that we have, laid out in a jukebox, baby and all the dreams that we have always dreamed, they're laid out in a jukebox, baby(repeated twice more), ooh you're my jukebox baby. Slow, electronic sound(i.e it doesn't feature any conventional old instruments like guitars, drums, pianos etc). Song 1 - Female singer who could be Irish. They all came out at least 4 or 5 years ago(but probably not long before that) and I only know some of the lyrics. It's a long-shot but I hope somebody can help me here.
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