Anyway, as a person who drinks too much, this is how I related to the song…but the genius of the lyrics is that it could totally have the double meaning of his womanizing and, perhaps, the self loathing that may go along with that too (I’ve never gone through this, but I can empathize). I could see this about women too? And the suicidal ideation that comes along with being depressed and alcoholic is spot on. As someone who has sworn off alcohol a thousand times, but then moved “on to the next one (drink)…it resonates. I super related to the “I love it but I hate the taste” (alcohol) and “done, done, on to the next one” lines. I didn’t know about the history with his ex-wife and of his tramping about for awhile, so I feel like the lyrics could be about both alcoholism and women. As someone who drinks too much, I related to this totally from an alcoholic point of view. Chic Who Drinks Too Much from Somewhere UsaInteresting about the oral sex take on the lyrics.Lyrics licensed and provided by LyricFind Publisher: BMG Rights Management, Universal Music Publishing Group Shiflett, David Eric Grohl, Nate Mendel, Taylor Hawkins Hey, don't let it go to waste, I love it but I hate the taste Leaves me with the feeling that I feel the mostįeel it come to life when I see your ghost Something never comes, never leads to nothingĬloser to the prize at the end of the rope "We are so lucky that destiny brought these three Hongdae slobs together in Kyoto.All my life, I've been searching for something "Ki-soo is endlessly hilarious, ambitious, kind and, of course, a very good musician," Walker said. "I never met the Nice Legs family in Seoul," Moon said, "even though I was living in Hongdae and Mangwon-dong and we have so many friends in common!" As a drummer, he was in high demand, performing with Zero Gravity Boy, PIGIBIT5, i-Fun, Seahorse Corps and Rooster Ride. Moon, an ethnic Korean resident of Japan, lived in Korea from 2008 to 2018, during which time he studied music at Studio Navi and apprenticed with folk-rock singer-songwriter Kang San-eh. Pretty quickly, they found out they had both lived in the area near western Seoul's Hongik University around the same time and knew a lot of the same people. The three members of dream-pop band Nice Legs / Courtesy of Nice Legsĭuring a show at Annie's Cafe in Kyoto in May 2022, Walker met Moon Ki-soo, who introduced himself as a drummer and expressed interest in jamming sometime. "One of my favorite musicians and friends forever, Skip Skip Ben Ben, whom we met touring in Taipei, called us something like the World's Kids - and that feels pretty right." "I very definitively feel we were born in Korea, but we are living in Japan and are very much at home here," Walker told The Korea Times. But even after more than six years, they haven't forgotten about their early days in Korea. The band's two core members, Lauren Walker and Mark Lentz, relocated to Japan in early 2017, where they've been making music ever since. Now based in Kyoto, Nice Legs got its start in Seoul almost 10 years ago when two "Hongdae slobs" started making music together. Taking their name from an awkward line from Tommy Wiseau's 2003 cult film "The Room," the band even managed to lend their music to the score of 2017's "Best F(r)iends," starring Wiseau and Greg Sestero. Block Party 2023 in central Seoul will be a bit of a homecoming for the three-piece dream-pop band Nice Legs, who are coming from Japan to take part in the music and art festival.
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