Released: October 25, 2013

Songwriter: Mike d’Abo Tony Macaulay

Producer: ​twenty one pilots

Why do you fill me up, Buttercup, baby
Just to let me down, and mess me around
And worst of all you never come, baby
When you say you will, I love you still
I need you, I need you, more than anyone, darlin'
More than I have from the start
So fill me up, Buttercup, don't break my heart

I-I-I need you-oo more than anyone, darlin'
More than I have from the start
So fill me up, Buttercup, don't break my heart

(Do's)

Aye, baby baby, tell me, aye (more do's)
Aye I'll be home
...waiting for you-oo-oo, ooh ooh

Why do you fill me up, Buttercup, baby
Just to let me down, and mess me around
And worst of all you never come, baby
When you say you will, I love you still
I need you, I need you, more than anyone, darlin'
More than I have from the start
So fill me up, Buttercup, don't break my heart

(spoken) The good thing about music videos is I don't have to preserve my voice because I'm not actually singing

I-I-I need you-oo more than anyone, darlin'
More than I have from the start
So fill me up, Buttercup, don't break my heart

​twenty one pilots

twenty one pilots (also stylized as twenty øne piløts, TWENTY ØNE PILØTS, twenty | one | pilots, and TØP) consists of vocalist, pianist, bassist, and ukulele player Tyler Joseph and his best friend Josh Dun, who plays the drums and trumpet. The band’s genre is difficult to define, but best described as indie pop, with elements of rap, hip hop and rock. Fans have proclaimed their own music genre as “Schizoid Pop.”

The name twenty one pilots was inspired by the Arthur Miller play, All My Sons, a play about a man whose choice to send out faulty airplane parts for the good of his business and family caused the death of twenty-one pilots during World War II. The aspect of the play which influenced the band is the moral decisions and consequences that come with everyday decisions. Thus, the band fights the constant battle between man and mental illness. Their official website

Basically, we are all responsible for the preservation of our personal joy; but happiness is different. Joy is not circumstantial, happiness is.