Hayley Williams Dials it Back to the ’80s On New Song “Why We Ever”

Photo Credit: Mehreen Rizvi

Paramore singer and keyboardist Hayley Williams just released “Why We Ever,” another single set to appear on Williams’ debut solo album Petals For Armor, which is set to drop May 8th. The song will join “Over Yet” and “Roses/Lotus/Violet/Iris,” as well as the songs released as part of Petals For Armor I.

The song is a beautiful callback to the 1980’s, full of bouncy percussion, bass-slapping lines, and pad synths laying down the chords in the background, all accompanied by Williams’ velvety vocal delivery. The songs calls out for a lost love, as Williams sings in the chorus, “And now I / can’t seem to remember why / We ever / Felt we had to say goodbye”. The visuals appear to be filmed with a home video camera (just like er video for “Over Yet”), as Williams drives around in her car taking shots of the natural world around her. Halfway through the song, the tone shift dramatically to a much darker, melancholic sound, as Williams sings with just a piano accompaniment. The visuals reflect the tonal change in the song, as Williams films herself driving down a dimly lit road as the song ends.

“I was at the lowest point I’d been in some time. My sadness shows,” Williams wrote in the caption of an Instagram video showing her demoing the track. “Now I look back and credit this night as being the beginning of a new season of my life, where I hold myself accountable for learning to love better. I’ve let myself down a lot in love. This was the start of recognizing bad patterns and acknowledging that I’m ready to grow out of them.”

Williams has been in the process of releasing a plethora of solo songs as she begins to transition from a career with Paramore into a solo career, including “Cinnamon,” “Leave It Alone,” and most recently “My Friend“. All of the singles have been leading up to her Petals For Armor project which was supposed to be followed by Petals For Armor summer tour, but with the coronavirus pandemic currently restricting mass gatherings, the status of the tour is up in the air. Williams recently posted a video of herself covering Phoebe Bridgers’ “Smoke Signals” as an effort to entertain her fans during this period of quarantine.

Photo Credit: Mehreen Rizvi

Drew Feinerman: I have just completed my senior at the University of Michigan majoring in international studies with an emphasis in political economics and development, with a minor in Chinese language and culture, and I have recently been accepted into the Berklee School of Music's masters of music business program. Although my academic interests include economics, political science, and history, I consider music to be my one true passion. Music is, and has always been, a driving force for the way I think and act every day of my life. I have been playing the tenor saxophone since the age of ten, and playing an instrument at a high level has allowed me to only further my understanding and appreciation for music. While I grew up listening to predominantly classic rock, I soon found myself gravitating toward jazz, hip-hop, funk, and other genres, as my learned to both play and analyze music as a listener. As a writer, I am able to apply my skills both as a musician and a listener, and look forward to the opportunity to being able to express my thoughts on various stories in the music industry.
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