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Charlotte Martin – Drip Lyrics 16 years ago
Charlotte sings about the amazing chemistry she experiences with a lover:

"Jawbone clenched
A little drip drip drench
Some more attention, honey
Put your hand on my hand
Left to the clover
And I can't roll over
'Cause you do it so
You do it so well"


The underlying story: her lover is using her for physical and emotional gratification while promising her something he (or she) can't deliver - a long-term, romantic relationship between equals built on love and honesty. Charlotte really loves this person, but the relationship they have is inherently flawed. When she sings...

"Oh you can't start letting me
Can't start feeling me slide
Oh you can't start letting me
Can't start feeling me
Can't start watching me roll on by
Oh you can't start letting me
Can't start feeling me"

...she's echoing her lover, who's telling Charlotte to stay in the niche the lover has built for her in his/her life. 'This is all you can have of me.' Also to that effect is this lyric:

"No more labor, I must sit and savor
In the knots you're putting inside my stomach"
(Stay in your niche)

"Need more water if this gets much hotter
Oh you me so
You see me too well"
(You know how to touch me, inside and out - how to pull my strings)


The refrain lyric, "Can't start watching me roll on by" also seems to be a note of possessiveness on the part of her lover - 'What I give isn't the best you could have with someone else, but I can't see you with anyone else, so stay in your niche.'


The lover says a fantasy is possible, and reinforces that promise with orgasms:

"I'll feel the anointing coming over me
And the thickness of it running down to my feet
You're seeing in the future
Here without the sutures
Oh you say it now
And say it real well"


Here's the fantasy again, and the pathos of the love spurring her denial of the reality of the situation:

"My imagination
Of your fascination
That I swore existed in a new dimension
Come a little closer to the engine motor
I could love you so
I love you so well"


In the short bridge, Charlotte says she wants to untangle herself from the emotional and physical conundrum, but she doesn't know how:

"I'd really like to understand this
Pedestal that's blowing my mind this
Try, might be the last one landing boy"


Even though she knows she's in a bad situation, she believes her lover and tries to stay within the lines, so to speak - but the lover has blurred the lines so many times before, she can't hold out anymore and ends up in bed with him or her yet again:

"Tumbling down with you on the ground
Can't train myself to hold back any longer"


And in the second part of this verse, Charlotte tells her lover to help her brick-up her emotions by appeasing her libido:

"Breath mint fornicator
I can bear it
If you do her now
Just do her real well"


This verse throws me a little; I'm not sure about it because it sounds like it's tied-up in an inside reference that only she and her lover would understand. I think Charlotte is trying to say that she feels like she and her lover have somehow managed to suppress the overwhelming desires they have for each other - but it also sounds like she's amazed by the depth and power of what they become when they're with each other.

"There's enough provision here to fix my vision
I swear I think I have a superpower
Mathematician
Wants a nice physician
But you told her off
I'll tell her off well"


This song makes a lot more sense if you consider it in the context of the entire album (Stromata), which is obviously about her experience as 'the other woman.' Being involved with someone who's ultimately unavailable is a difficult situation to comprehend unless you've been in it before - and even then, if you are in that situation, it can be confusing.

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