I actually did play with the tracklist a little bit and it was for just this reason - it was just too weird for me to have "False God" come right after "Soon You'll Get Better". I love both songs but they do not work for me next to each other like that at all. Not one bit.
I have no issues with the sequencing on this record, really. It's got a good ebb and flow/rise and fall. Then again, I massively side-eye anyone resequencing an album anyway, so I'm not really an authority.
Contrary take: “Cornelia Street” has great lyrics, but it doesn’t really go anywhere musically interesting to me. Might as well be a demo.
Totally off topic but her teeth make me feel better about my own. I know hers are veneers but that somehow makes it better to me, like she chose to have that feature. Meaning like large teeth and an overbite. Im super insecure about mine and it kinda bums me out when I see ppl criticize her teeth, but when I see her smile I think it rly makes her look unique and lights up her face so I #aspire to have the same quality
Rotfl Jajajaja I think we've covered the laughing spectrum. Wait is there internet slang for like.... Quietly chuckling to myself (QCTM)? Or do we always have to go DRAMATIC
I think like 99% of the time I'm like hahahaha lmao omg dying!! My face is usually irl just like Also sidenote, when lookup laugh gifs this came up. Is she laughing or sneezing??
Haha, that’s a bummer. I think it’s an awesome story. The second half of the chorus is one of my top moments on the album.
"Cornelia Street" is some of her strongest lyrical work in years, maybe ever. Top five on the record for me.
been obsessed w @unbornwhiskey 's re-sequencing/edit of this it's making me artificially inflate how I feel about it, forgetting that songs like "ME!" exist lol
Also "Cornelia St" may somehow not be for everyone but that song is probably one of the best summaries of what makes TS great since... actually, I'm not sure. But it's probably a top 10 for me.
I feel like it’s also the kind of TS song that will only continue to grow on me over time. Not as immediate as something like “Cruel Summer,” but also just something that I think is really detailed and full of life from a writing perspective.