‘Vain’ written by frontmen Fin Anderton and Declan Bodger, is a song sought to explore the tension between how someone is perceived and how they truly feel – peeling back the layers of pretense to reveal what lies beneath.
They aimed to ask: if we see you for who you really are, why hide it?
Regard...
You made me a better man
You were my better half
I can hear the echoes
From the times that I made you laugh
Thought I would’ve rescued you by now
Feeling like you got me figured out
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
You’re anaesthetic loving got me feeling numb
But don’t stop
Maybe you can tell me when the work is done
Created the darkened skies
Same way my mother cried
There’s bodies in the floor
Do you think you can fit one more
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
It’s such a shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
Shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
Shame
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
I can see sadness but you’re
I can see sadness but you’re
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
I can see sadness but you’re
I can see sadness but you’re
I can see sadness but you’re so vain
Vain was written by Fin Anderton & Declan Bodger & Lloyd Richard Jones & Sam Trotman & Callum Eckley.
Vain was produced by Fin Anderton.