Speaker 3
I was thinking about this recently and I think that the main thing that I've been doing since the band started or since I took over writing, I've been a communicator. I think that's a great thing to be able to do to just sit in your room, write some words, down put them to music and then they go out all around the world and people listen to them and they understand you.
Speaker 2
But can I be really granular for a second and ask that question? When you're writing people are people, what are you going through that makes you want to ask the question? Help me understand why we are like we are to each other. It's a big question. Not my question. Your question, by the way, just to be really clear. What you're asking.
Speaker 3
There was a lot of stuff going on at that time. There always is. There's even more going on today. Things don't change
Speaker 2
that much. People don't change that much. Unfortunately. I was stuck in a loop. It's true.
Speaker 3
Just before that, because we came from a, although it was quite a lot of people lived in our hometown, it was still considered a very small town, very small town mentality. We traveled a lot during the first years of the band and we saw a lot more. I think that just opened us up to so many things that were happening in the world. That's where that song came
Speaker 2
from. It's a competitive. It's so interesting. At that age in my life, I'm an socioeconomic meltdown trying to figure out what that song means.
Speaker 1
I don't understand who puts food on the table where it comes from and what's happening. The backdrop, of course, is very pop as well. It's a danceable, sing along thing that we were doing a lot at that time. Creeping in there always and getting away with it as well, were these subversive political