Released: September 25, 2019

Songwriter: Mark Hoppus Matt Skiba

[Verse 1: Mark Hoppus]
Leave a light in your bedroom
For when I stumble down the hall
Got nowhere left to go to
Guess I shouldn't go anywhere at all
And I hear what you're saying
But I still keep banging away
Left a note on my windshield
Saying that you shouldn't have to
Waste another day of my life

[Chorus: Mark Hoppus]
Get me out of my head
Empty, left for dead
Don't make this so complicated
There's no point in a conversation
Get you out of my head
Let's both just forget
How this got so complicated
There's no point in a conversation

[Verse 2: Matt Skiba]
I can tell this time that you're leaving
Free yourself of me and my demons
Caught ever hurting your feelings
Said I can't take this no more
Ran away on a bike that I gave you
Sold it off the next day you came to
Can't stand me, can't say I blame you
I can't take this anymore
I can't stand me anymore

[Chorus: Mark Hoppus]
Get me out of my head
Empty, left for dead
Don't make this so complicated
There's no point in a conversation
Get you out of my head
Let's both just forget
How this got so complicated
There's no point in a conversation

[Bridge: Mark Hoppus]
There's no point in a conversation
There's no point in a conversation

[Chorus: Mark Hoppus]
Get me out of my head
Empty, left for dead
Don't make this so complicated
There's no point in a conversation
Get you out of my head
Let's both just forget
How this got so complicated
There's no point in a conversation

​​blink-182

blink-182 set off the 1990s storm of pop-punk, blazing a trail in the genre with electrifying riffs and memorable lines—“Fuck a Dog,” anyone? The band has seen some lineup changes over the years, but its core trio (Tom DeLonge, Mark Hoppus, and Travis Barker) has mostly stood the test of time. As of 2015, DeLonge left the band to pursue other projects.

Founded in 1992 in Poway, California (a suburb in San Diego), DeLonge, Hoppus, and former drummer Scott Raynor formed the band in Raynor’s bedroom, writing songs for their demos, and playing practical jokes along the way. Initially, under the name Blink, the trio was forced to change the name to avoid a lawsuit with the Irish pop-rock group of the same name, so they added “182” at random (fans continue to speculate what “182” means to this day).

After releasing their demo album Buddha, blink-182 released Cheshire Cat in 1995 under Cargo Records. While not a major success at the time, the album generated buzz from the Southern California punk scene and major labels alike. After being signed to MCA Records, the band released Dude Ranch in 1997 with the hit singles “Dammit” and “Josie”.