Ed Sheeran tells a story of unsuccessfully trying to feel “Amazing.” This track is about the being weighed down by emotional stress despite valiant attempts to find some positivity in the situation. This track was written by Ed Sheeran from the perspective of his friend. From the track, we see this person fall deeper into the negative thoughts and slide further down the path of mental torment with every lyric.
A cold cup of coffee
And a sad song
I turn up the radio
And I sing along
I know you once you loved me
In your own way
But when the sun finds your window
I'll be miles away
And I'm one step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin', gone
Well leaving might just kill me
But I can't stay
And just watch the fire die
A little more every day
Now I'm one step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin' gone
Yeah, I'm step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late to for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin', gone
Hey this is me moving on
I'm goin', goin', gone
And a sad song
I turn up the radio
And I sing along
I know you once you loved me
In your own way
But when the sun finds your window
I'll be miles away
And I'm one step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin', gone
Well leaving might just kill me
But I can't stay
And just watch the fire die
A little more every day
Now I'm one step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin' gone
Yeah, I'm step ahead of the heartache
One foot out the door
And it's too late to for your words to stop me
From crossing the floor
And like the moon fades with the dawn
I'm goin', goin', gone
Hey this is me moving on
I'm goin', goin', gone
Lyrics submitted by Rosaline23
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Amazing
Ed Sheeran
Ed Sheeran

Somewhere Only We Know
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Keane
Per the FAQ on Keane's website, Keane's drummer Richard Hughes, stated the following:
"We've been asked whether "Somewhere Only We Know" is about a specific place, and Tim has been saying that, for him, or us as individuals, it might be about a geographical space, or a feeling; it can mean something individual to each person, and they can interpret it to a memory of theirs... It's perhaps more of a theme rather than a specific message... Feelings that may be universal, without necessarily being totally specific to us, or a place, or a time..."
With the nostalgic sentiment and the overall tone of the song, I think Keane is attempting to express a Portuguese term known as 'saudade', which does not have a direct English translation but roughly means "that which we remember because it is gone."

Indigo
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This track is about is about questioning why the sky would choose to be blue if it had the choice to be anything else, “blue also meaning sad,” states frontman Aaron Pauley. “It's about comforting a loved one in a time of loss by telling them you feel blue, too.”

X French T-Shirt
Shudder to Think
Shudder to Think
This song is timeless, and nearly 20 years after its creation, still possesses the mystique it did the first time i heard it ~1994. To me, at first blush, all those years ago, it had some kind of homo-erotic allure. The line "so that the others may do" tells of something which must be done for others to follow suit. It felt like like some kind of roxy-glam-pop invitation to sexual liberation.
Upon further introspection I think the song may not have an intrinsic meaning, but simply represents a sort of "holding open the door" for people who otherwise might be affronted by this song/band's unusual style. I know, as a sort of armchair rock-historian, that there have been few bands so daring and so true to the sound that wanted to emerge from within, whether the creator wanted it or not. This band handled it with elegance and grace seldom, if ever, seen.

Mad Hatter
Avenged Sevenfold
Avenged Sevenfold
Matt Shadows their lead singer says the song was written as per request from the developers of Call of Duty: Black Ops 4. Watching the initial trailers for the game & looking at production sketches reminded him of the 'S-Town' podcast & its main protagonist, John B. McLemore. Matt also comments specifically on the lyrics: "I decided that the lyrics would shadow McLemore's life." In 2012, antiquarian horologist John B. McLemore sent an email to the staff of the show 'This American Life' asking them to investigate an alleged murder in his hometown of Woodstock, Alabama, a place McLemore claimed to despise. After a year of exchanging emails & several months of conversation with McLemore, producer Brian Reed traveled to Woodstock to investigate. Reed investigated the crime & eventually found that no such murder took place, though he struck up a friendship with the depressed but colorful character of McLemore. He recorded conversations with McLemore & other people in Woodstock. McLemore killed himself by drinking potassium cyanide on June 22, 2015 while the podcast was still in production. In the narrative of the podcast, this occurs at the end of the second episode; subsequent episodes deal with the fallout from McLemore's death while exploring more of McLemore's life & character.