Mura Masa Teenage Headache Dreams

Mura Masa Teenage Headache Dreams




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Mura Masa Teenage Headache Dreams
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Mura Masa, Ellie Rowsell & Wolf Alice Lyrics



I want to be free
Remember how we used to be?
Sit at home and dream
Stare at each other like TV
Teenage headache dreams
Come back to me at night
And try as though I might to live for now
I don't know how
I just feel down
Teenage headache dreams
Seems like the good time's over
But nothing's really over anymore
Just take control

I want to be free
Romanticize reality
Reminds me what it means
To be me
Teenage headache dreams
I'd give up on the fight
To try as though I'd like to leave the moment
I don't know how
Teenage headache dreams
Up all night
To taste life twice
When I think back again
And back again

She rests her head on my shoulder
Blue
Just like always
Teen movies, older too
She softly spoke the words
Is it gonna be okay?
What the hell am I gonna do today?
I'm like a runaway train and I
Try to explain
It has to be
Just try and see tomorrow
You'll look back fondly, I promise

Teenage headache dreams
Teenage headache dreams
Teenage headache dreams
Up all night
To taste life twice
Teenage headache dreams
Teenage headache dreams
And try as though I might to live for now

Writer(s): Ellen Rowsell, Alexander Crossan




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"Teenage Headache Dreams" is a dreamy collaboration between Mura Masa and Ellie Rowsell from Wolf Alice. The song finds the pair looking back at a teenage romance, wondering if such escapism is healthy. Teenage headache dreams Come back to me at night And try as though I might to live for now I don't know how, I just feel down Masa said: "It's possible to feel happy even if it means relying on something that isn't necessarily true, or is half-imagined, or might not even have happened at all."
Masa's wrestling with the emotional crutch of nostalgia is a theme that runs throughout R.Y.C. "I think it must be some sort of reptile brain thing where it's like, 'Well, if I try and remember a good time, maybe that means there will be another one,'" the producer told The Guardian .
Mura Masa is best known for his electronic productions, but here he plays a spread of typical rock band instruments fueled by his childhood obsessions with bands such as Blur, Joy Division and Talking Heads. He told Zane Lowe on his Beats 1 radio show this was an attempt to "reflect this otherworldly idea I have about the music I grew up with." He added that he wrote the lyrics very quickly. "It felt like I was speaking from the heart about what it feels like to be caught up in the cycles of nostalgia, and how it feels to grow through that."
Masa had never met Rowsell before, but he reached out to her as he felt she was the perfect person for this track. He told Dazed Digital : "I had already written the first verse and the main bones of the song, and then she came in and wrote her verse as well. I think it slots in perfectly."
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10 January 2020

10 January 2020




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Home | Blog | Release | Mura Masa Drops Emotive “Teenage Headache Dreams”
Mura Masa has today dropped the brand-new track, “Teenage Headache Dreams” with Wolf Alice front-woman Ellie Rowsell – the final teaser of his much-anticipated second album R.Y.C (Raw Youth Collage) , which will be released on January 17. The sophomore album has been introduced by “I Don’t Think I Can Do This Again” (with Clairo) and the anthemic lead single “Deal Wiv It” .
“Teenage Headache Dreams” is the affecting and powerful climax of Mura Masa’s second album, R.Y.C’ (Raw Youth Collage) . Written and performed by Alex and Ellie Rowsell in response to some of the album’s central themes – nostalgia, memory, youth, hope – it’s the song that Mura Masa believes might contain the album’s ultimate message; the fact that (he says) “it’s possible to feel happy even if it means relying on something that isn’t necessarily true, or is half-imagined, or might not even have happened at all. If we can find a shared remembrance of a good time, we’re more likely to be able to find that again. A little bit of escapism is healthy” . Or as “Teenage Headache Dreams” puts it: “seems like the good time’s over / but nothing’s really over anymore / Just take control” .
Mere days into 2020, Mura Masa appears poised to deliver one of the year’s most essential, unpredictable records. R.Y.C breathes new life into – amongst other things – New Wave, Emo, Folk and 90s Rave, reinventing the Grammy -winning, Guernsey-native’s sound whilst also paying tribute to the alternative roots which shaped Alex’s most formative years. Lyrically, too, R.Y.C takes Mura Masa’s story into bold new directions. A concept record at heart, the record focuses on a generational dependency on nostalgia as a means of coping with the hopelessness of the present. It interrogates the reliability of past excitement, innocence, and whether what we constantly try to recapture is as reliable as we might think. The eclectic mix of guests across R.Y.C were all asked by Mura Masa to contribute with these themes and their own experiences of them in mind. The stunning results confirm that even when interrogating the past, Mura Masa sounds like the future.

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