I got this feeling on the summer day when you were gone
I crashed my car into the bridge, I watched, I let it burn
I threw your shit into a bag and pushed it down the stairs
I crashed my car into the bridge

I don't care, I love it
I don't care

I got this feeling on the summer day when you were gone
I crashed my car into the bridge, I watched, I let it burn
I threw your shit into a bag and pushed it down the stairs
I crashed my car into the bridge

I don't care, I love it
I don't care

You're on a different road, I'm in the Milky Way
You want me down on Earth, but I am up in space
You're so damn hard to please, we gotta kill this switch
You're from the '70s, but I'm a '90s bitch

I love it
I love it

I got this feeling on the summer day when you were gone
I crashed my car into the bridge, I watched, I let it burn
I threw your shit into a bag and pushed it down the stairs
I crashed my car into the bridge

I don't care, I love it
I don't care, I love it, I love it
I don't care, I love it
I don't care

You're on a different road, I'm in the Milky Way
You want me down on Earth, but I am up in space
You're so damn hard to please, we gotta kill this switch
You're from the '70s, but I'm a '90s bitch

I don't care, I love it
I don't care, I love it, I love it
I don't care, I love it
I don't care, I love it, I love it
I don't care
I love it


Lyrics submitted by tesstigermilk, edited by xmaskitty

I Love It Lyrics as written by Charlotte Emma Aitchison Patrik Jens Berger

Lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd.

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I Love It song meanings
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    General Comment

    This song is really an allegory about the struggle between capitalism and communism. The singer is frustrated with the capitalist society that dominates her life. She decides to do away with the "blessings" of capitalism, e.g. her car and capitalism's shit which she throws out in a bag. This song is an embodiment of her youth growing up in socialist Sweden. While this song has become popular in the U.S., it is clearly a thinly veiled criticism of capitalist society that is ensconced in the very structure of the United States itself.

    Although the song may appear to be about a romantic relationship, this is a shallow reading of the text at hand, and there is overwhelming evidence to the contrary. She brings the element of romance into her lyrics in order to appeal to a Western audience, because she too is caught up in the insidious web of capitalism. In order to sell her anti-American piece to wider audiences, on the surface level she depicts a classic American love affair.

    "You're so damn hard to please, we gotta kill this switch You're from the 70s, but I'm a 90s bitch" In this crucial phrase she points out how thirsty the subjects of capitalism are for more and more success. She notes that capitalism is a circular trap and we must switch it off before we can find life's meaning. The 70s were the high tide of capitalism in response to the strong counter-culture movement in the 60s. She notes that those born in the 90s are children of communism that must question the very nature of capitalism in order to escape from the limiting corporeal realm. She supports this supposition by noting that she is "up in space" while capitalism seeks to drag her down to "earth".

    In conclusion, Icona Pop has become an icon of the socialist and communist movements that will inspire entire generations to come. Hits like these will hit back against the oppressive structure of capitalism.

    b2bWW2Champson December 21, 2013   Link

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