“Cherry Cola” is New Zealand singer October’s first single following her debut EP “Switchblade”
Cherry Cola was released on September 9th 2016 and is described as a “critique on youth culture”.
[Chorus]
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
Sick to death of it wishing you weren't were sober
Such a shame to feel that you're getting older
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
[Verse 1]
Death can, sweet tooth
Spit blood, dead youth
Bleached brain, clean mind
Clean mouth, unkind
[Verse 2]
Girl afraid, boy too brave
All the rest are fucking fake
Let's have too much
Fuck this, I like it when our mouths touch
[Pre-Chorus]
Smoke at the parties 'cause I think it looks a little cooler
[Chorus]
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
Sick to death of it wishing you weren't sober
Such a shame to feel that you're getting older
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
[Verse 3]
Burn out, hot breath
Like smoke, fear death
Left home, big dream
No self-esteem
Girl afraid, boy too brave
[?]
Is it too much?
Fuck this, I hate it when you act tough
[Pre-Chorus]
Smoke at the parties 'cause I think it looks a little cooler
[Chorus]
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
Sick to death of it wishing you weren't were sober
Such a shame to feel that you're getting older
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
[Bridge]
We'll pretend that we're not sad
While sipping on our soda cans
[Chorus]
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
Sick to death of it wishing you weren't were sober
Such a shame to feel that you're getting older
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
Sick to death of it wishing you weren't were sober
Such a shame to feel that you're getting older
All the boys and girls sipping Cherry Cola
October released Cherry Cola on Fri Sep 09 2016.
“'Cherry Cola' is a critique on youth culture and the commercialisation surrounding it. It has become this pre-packaged and polished version of an idea we buy into in order to feel like we belong to something. ‘Cherry Cola’ is about the over-romanticised notion of teenagehood, and the stupid feats w...