Released: September 27, 2015

Featuring: Rachel Antonoff Brooke Candy

Songwriter: John Hill Jack Antonoff Grimes

Producer: Jack Antonoff

[Verse 1: Brooke Candy]
Love isn't always right
Yes isn't always no
Hate is a part of life
Houses ain't always homes
Yeah like, baby answer the question
I'm restless I need you to pay attention
You were flying and messing around
I've been trying to wrestle you down
Cuz I hate that I need you
And I know that you're sorry
You forget that I bleed too
I'ma human you hardly
Give me the breath that I crave
I cave and you press me to play
Yo, we gotta get outta this place
This poison I've chosen you take me away

[Chorus: Rachel Antonoff]
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry

[Verse 2: Brooke Candy]
Uh, yeah, sorry
I can feel they eyes on me
Everything I do like I got spies on me
Lined up, can't breathe, got ties on me
Yo, it's all up 'til they despising me
I mean I can't sit still
Can't catch a break
I don't how much of this I can take
I'ma human I'm tempted to rage
I'ma freak and I'm breaking the cage
And I hate when I crack up
And I know that you're sorry
Need some space, gotta back up
I'ma human you hardly
Listen to what I gotta say
And it's hard but I'm starting today
Yo, I gotta get out of this place
This poison I've chosen to take me away

[Chorus: Rachel Antonoff]
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry
I know you're sorry

[Outro: Brooke Candy]
(Incoherent Mumbles)

Bleachers

The so-called “80s-nostalgia” indie pop artist Bleachers infuses modern electronica with stylistic elements of the 80s. Headed by Jack Antonoff of Steel Train and Fun. fame, the band’s music is deeply personal, emotive, and lyrically evocative.

Their debut album Strange Desire was released July 10th, 2014, and was mostly written by Antonoff throughout his tour with fun. A very visceral, realized album that addresses death, memory, self-image, and spontaneity, among other themes, Desire showed the world the great potential Bleachers has to become the next pop act to become a household name.

After an EP featuring new versions of Like A River Runs and an album of Desire’s songs covered by female artists in the same vein of the final Steel Train album, the group returned with Gone Now. It featured many of the same themes as the first album.