Fix what’s wrong, but don’t rewrite what the artist wrote. Stick to the official released version — album booklet, label site, verified lyric video, etc. If you’re guessing, pause and double-check.
Respect the structure
Songs have rhythm. Pages do too. Leave line breaks where they belong. Don’t smash things together or add extra empty space just for looks.
Punctuation counts (but vibe-editing doesn’t)
Correct typos? Yes. Re-punctuating a whole verse because it ‘looks better’? Probably not. Keep capitalization and punctuation close to the official source.
Don’t mix versions
If you’re editing the explicit version, keep it explicit. If it’s the clean version, keep it clean. No mashups.
Let the lyrics be lyrics
This isn’t the place for interpretations, memories, stories, or trivia — that’s what comments are for. Keep metadata, translations, and bracketed stage directions out unless they’re officially part of the song.
Edit lightly
If two lines are wrong… fix the two lines. No need to bulldoze the whole page. Think ‘surgical,’ not ‘remix.’
When in doubt, ask the crowd
Not sure what they’re singing in that fuzzy bridge? Drop a question in the comments and let the music nerds swarm. Someone always knows.
I adore Souvlaki, their second album. Having heard this for the first time today - a mere 20 eyars after its release - I must buy a copy of Pygmalion, the album that this came from.
And Rachel Goswell was a total, total fox, mmmmmmmm
Add your song meanings, interpretations, facts, memories & more to the community.
Neil Halstead is a genius. This track proves it
I adore Souvlaki, their second album. Having heard this for the first time today - a mere 20 eyars after its release - I must buy a copy of Pygmalion, the album that this came from.
And Rachel Goswell was a total, total fox, mmmmmmmm
been listening to this since it's release still accessible amazing
something about this song is just so pretty. doesn’t need a lot of lyrics to show how much of a beautiful song it really is.