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MU“Liability by Lorde” arrived in 2017 as the emotional center of her album Melodrama — a stripped-back piano ballad that felt almost shocking in its honesty compared to the pop landscape around it.
Unlike songs built around heartbreak between two people, Liability turns inward. Lorde described it not as being about someone else, but about realizing how her life and personality sometimes make relationships harder to maintain — feeling like, at some point, people begin to see her as “too much,” or difficult to keep close.
Much of the song came from moments spent alone — long taxi rides, empty rooms, the quiet space after the excitement fades — when success and attention don’t protect you from loneliness. That realization shaped the song’s central idea: learning to be your own best company when you start to feel like a burden to others.
Producer Jack Antonoff and Lorde deliberately kept the production minimal, letting the vocal sit almost unprotected against the piano. No distractions, no big drop — just the feeling, front and center. The result feels less like a performance and more like overhearing someone’s private thoughts.
Over time, the song became something of a refuge for listeners. Comment sections and late-night playlists often call it a “crying song,” the track people return to when they feel misunderstood, left behind, or simply exhausted from trying to be easy to love.
But the song isn’t only about sadness. Beneath the loneliness sits a quiet realization: if everyone eventually leaves the party, you still have to stay with yourself. And maybe learning to like that person is the real turning point.
Liability doesn’t beg to be understood.
It simply tells the truth — and lets listeners find themselves in it.
Song: Liability
Artist: @lorde
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