Released: December 6, 2017

Songwriter: Calvin Harris Katy Perry Big Sean Pharrell Williams Starrah

[Intro]
Love this piano
1, Here we go guys, hey

[Verse 1]
Well nothing ever last forever, no
One minute you're here (here) and the next you're gone
So I respect you, wanna take it slow
I need a mental receipt to know this moment I owe

[Pre-Chorus]
Do you mind if I steal a kiss?
A little sou, little souvenir, can I steal it from you? (steal it from you)
Oh, to memorize the way you shock me (ou, ou)
The way you move it here
Just wanna feel it from you (feel it from you)

[Chorus]
Don't be afraid to catch feels (feel, feels, ha ha)
Oh, ride drop top and chase thrills
I know (I know), I know you ain't afraid to pop pills
Oh baby, I know you ain't scared to catch feels
Feels with me

[Verse 2]
I'm your window shopper (shopper)
Sucker for your love, oh
And I'm wearing your goggles (goggles), virtual reality (hey)
It ain't what it cost you, it might be a dollar
As long as it shocks you, oh, memory, electricity

[Outro]
Wow, that felt great
That one felt awesome
Can you hear the back, yeaa can we hear that back

Fifth Harmony

Fifth Harmony is a girl group that formed out of contestants on the 2012 edition of The X Factor USA, chosen by Simon Ally Brooke Hernandez, Normani Kordei, Lauren Jauregui, Dinah Jane Hansen, and Camila Cabello. Despite being eliminated at third place, Fifth Harmony moved on to being signed with Syco Music.

Their first album, Reflection, was released on February 3rd, 2015, and peaked at number 5 on the Billboard 200, becoming their second top ten on that chart following their 2013 EP, Better Together. The album also merited their first top 40 single, “Sledgehammer.”

Their second album, 7/27, was released on May 27th, 2016 and debuted at number 4 on the Billboard 200, making it the group’s highest charting album to date. Its lead single, “Work From Home” featuring rapper Ty Dolla Sign, catapulted the girls even further into mainstream success. The track debuted on the Billboard Hot 100 at #12 and reached #4 after 13 weeks and became the girls' highest-charting single in the U.S. and the first top-five single in the country by a girl group since “Buttons” by The Pussycat Dolls.