
February 23, 2023
Tobias Jesso Jr. You may know his name from his 2015 solo album Goon. Or maybe from his work on various popular songs, such as “When We Were Young” by Adele and “Alive” by Sia. Or even from his rece
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February 23, 2023
HBO’s The Last of Us is arguably the hottest show out right now, receiving near universal acclaim from viewers and critics alike. This holds especially true for episode three: “Long, Long Time”.
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February 21, 2023
Folk singer. Songwriter. Canadian. Polyglot. All of these titles belong to Gina Lam, also known by her stage name Ginalina. In November 2022, she released her latest album titled Going Back: Remembe
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February 21, 2023
Rihanna is an illustrious artist. She is among the best selling female artists of all time, and was one of the greatest hitmakers of the 2000s and 2010s. She has since grown to become the richest...
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February 20, 2023
Streaming is now the driving force of the music industry, making up 84% of the industry revenue in the U.S. While streaming is much more convenient for listeners, many artists argue that it is near im
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February 23, 2023
Who is the greatest rapper of all time? Is it even possible to crown just one person? Well, Billboard and Vibe did exactly that. And, according to them, that person is Jay-Z. In honor of Hip-Hop’s
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February 18, 2023
Kaytranada (Louis Celestin) is a Haitian-Canadian record producer and DJ. He is a highly acclaimed electronic artist, having earned two Grammys and countless other awards for his work. Kaytranada has
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February 17, 2023
What happens when a famous music producer takes an interest in self-help books? The Creative Act is your answer. But who is Rick Rubin? Without a doubt, Rubin has an impressive track record in the
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February 14, 2023
The music industry is a place full of musicians, producers, and creators who have the magical ability to make those perfect sounds we hear everyday through our digital devices. We want to listen close
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February 14, 2023
What do popular video games franchises Super Mario, Legend of Zelda, and Star Fox all have in common? They were all produced and published by Nintendo, and the iconic music themes that you hear in...
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February 8, 2023
Being a successful woman in the music industry is no easy feat. Not only do they deal with the typical trials and tribulations of being a musician, but there are also gender-specific challenges.
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February 8, 2023
“Is it just me, or are songs getting shorter these days?” This is a question I have often pondered, especially in the last few years. It appears that in the era of social media, attention spans are
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Laufey’s “Lover Girl” isn’t just a song, it’s a soft, sweeping confession wrapped in strings, jazz chords, and the kind of vulnerability that makes you want to cry into your oat milk latte. With her signature vintage flair and Gen Z self-awareness, Laufey captures what it feels like to almost fall in love, over and over again. It’s a gentle spiral, and she makes every second of it sound like a black-and-white film you never want to leave.
“Lover Girl” opens like a sigh. The melody is delicate, yet haunting, with Laufey’s warm vocals gliding over a minimal arrangement that feels more like a whisper than a performance. And then the lyrics hit, simple, honest, and emotionally lethal: “I just wanna be a lover girl / Paint my eyelids pink and curl my hair.” In under three minutes, she manages to unravel the secret ache of longing without ever raising her voice. It’s heartbreak in soft focus, and it’s devastating.
The track exists somewhere between Ella Fitzgerald and TikTok, a nostalgic nod to jazz and bossa nova filtered through the melancholy of modern girlhood. Laufey isn’t loud. She doesn’t need to be. Her power lies in restraint, in the pregnant pauses, in the hesitation, in the almosts. “Lover Girl” is filled with those almosts. Almost kissed. Almost said something. Almost was loved back. And that aching ambiguity is what makes it so real.
At its core, the song is about wanting to be seen, not just noticed, but truly seen. Laufey paints the picture of a girl who’s always watching from the sidelines, falling for people who don’t quite fall back. The kind of girl who walks home under fairy lights, replaying conversations in her head, wondering what she could’ve done differently. And when she sings “I'm just a girl that people date before the one they marry,” oof. That’s not a lyric. That’s a knife in the chest.
What makes “Lover Girl” especially magical is how universal it feels. It’s for the girls who overthink everything, who romanticize glances, who feel too much and say too little. It’s for the shy flirters, the playlist makers, the ones who write love letters they’ll never send. Laufey’s music doesn’t shout for attention, it softly knocks on the door of your heart and hands you a cup of tea and a memory you forgot you had.
In a world obsessed with spectacle, “Lover Girl” is a quiet rebellion. It reminds us that softness is still strength, that longing can be its own kind of poetry, and that you don’t have to be loud to be unforgettable. Laufey’s not just making music, she’s creating a safe little pocket in the universe for the tenderhearted. And for anyone who's ever whispered “I just wanna be loved” into the dark, this one’s for you.
So light a candle, curl your hair (or don’t), and let “Lover Girl” play on repeat.