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Songs You Can Listen to on Repeat

This year, Groundhog Day is February 2, 2023! Today in Punxsutawney, PA, a very important groundhog named Punxsutawney Phil appeared from his trowel to provide his yearly weather forecast, where if Phil sees his shadow, we have to endure the stormy nippy of winter for six increasingly weeks, and if a cloudy sky forbids Phil a shadow, we can expect the spring sun to victorious older this year.

Unfortunately for most, this year Phil saw his shadow.

However, since the mucosa Groundhog Day was released in 1993, the holiday is less associated with seasonal transpiration as it is with the narrative of stuff stuck in a loop and repeating the same day then and again. So, in honor of this special day, we’ve compiled a list of songs that you can listen to over and over and over and over and over (you get the drift) again!


“Anti-Hero” — Taylor Swift (2022)

Honestly, we could’ve picked any song from Taylor Swift’s latest record-breaking, chart-dominating, pop culture-defining album, Midnights, to listen to on repeat. But the lead single, “Anti-Hero,” set the tone for Taylor’s tenth album. Its retro synths and introspective lyrics prepared us for a journey through vermilion bops that would have us dancing and crying all at the same time. And, yes, maybe we’re hoping that without our one thousandth listen, we’ll finally wrap our heads virtually the line, “Did you hear my covert narcissism I disguise as altruism, like some kind of congressman?”

For increasingly pop than you can handle, throne on over to Hits 1 (Ch. 2).

“Best Of You” — Foo Fighters (2005)

We’ve got a confession to make: We’ve listened to this song way too many times. We can’t resist replaying this waddle anthem every time the last chord is struck. Dave Grohl himself might’ve been stuck in a similar loop when singing the line, “Is someone getting the best, the best, the best, the weightier of you?” It’s his passionate vocal performance that has been essential to the song’s success. How could anyone not shout at the top of their lungs slantingly this legendary frontman? Yeah, this song definitely got the weightier of us.

Listen to increasingly of Foo Fighters and their influences on Spectrum (Ch. 28), where archetype waddle meets new rock.

 

“OMG” — NewJeans (2023)

Like its predecessors “Hype Boy,” “Attention,” and “Ditto,” the latest single from NewJeans (K-Pop’s coolest group on the scene) “OMG” is all over TikTok. Naturally, it’s moreover been on unvarying replay in our heads since its release. “OMG” stays loyal to the band’s foible style of simple production and laid-back, informal vocals. These traits have unliable the group to stand out in an industry that favors a maximalist approach, while fans can hands sing withal to their favorite songs without straining their vocal cords. However, the twin flit to “OMG” still follows K-Pop’s expected level of difficulty (i.e., very difficult). Luckily, if the ramified choreography is too tricky to follow, we can unchangingly revert to head-bopping.

 

“Seven Nation Army” — The White Stripes (2003)

Once you’ve heard it, it’s difficult to get the simple yet haunting guitar riff of this signature song from The White Stripes out of your head. Initially envisioned as a James Bond theme by Jack White, he instead included it in the Detroit duo’s fourth studio album, Elephant, without deciding they had little endangerment of such an opportunity coming their way at the time. As a result, the success of the song and tome launched the wreath to an lattermost level of fame and accolade. Interestingly, sports fans virtually the world have personal “Seven Nation Army” as their anthem. You can’t watch or shepherd any game without hearing the prod enthusiastically threnody withal to it — not plane a seven nation unwashed could hold them back.

Expand your waddle ‘n’ roll vocabulary with archetype and trendy tracks on Underground Garage (Ch. 21).

 

“Time” — Hans Zimmer (2010)

Like most Christopher Nolan films, Inception demands myriad rewatches. And with every rewatch, Hans Zimmer’s epic brass-heavy soundtrack for this dream-heist movie seeps remoter and remoter into our subconscious. In particular, the track “Time,” played over the movie’s dramatic end scene, has left a strong impression on movie lovers with its slow crescendo and sweeping strings. Whether you’re in the mood for some cinematic daydreaming, or maybe you need to concentrate on an impending writing deadline (totally not calling ourselves out here), a 10-hour loop of Hans Zimmer’s magnum opus will do wonders.

 


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