I actually wrote the first verse and some of the chorus of ‘enough for you’ going on a walk around my neighborhood I got the idea for ‘good 4 u’ in the shower. I find that I come up with really good ideas when I'm driving for that same reason. “I took an AP psychology class in high school my junior year, and they said that you're the most creative when you're doing some type of menial task, because half of your brain is occupied with something and the other half is just left to roam. You're okay now.’” A little older and a lot wiser, Rodrigo shares the wisdom she learned channeling all of that into one of the most memorable debut albums in ages. It’s nice to go back and see what I was feeling, and be like, ‘It all turned out all right. I felt all those things, and they're still very real, but I'm definitely not going through that as acutely as I used to. “I called the record SOUR because it was this really sour period of my life-I remember being so sad, and so insecure, and so angry. “All the feelings that I was feeling were so intense,” Rodrigo says. It has the sound and feel of an instant classic, a Jagged Little Pill for Gen Z. Anchored by the now-ubiquitous breakup ballad ‘drivers license’-an often harrowing, closely studied lead single that already felt like a lock for song-of-the-year honors the second it arrived in January 2021-SOUR combines the personal and universal to often devastating effect, folding diary-like candor and autobiographical detail into performances that recall the millennial pop of Taylor Swift (“favorite crime”) just as readily as the ’90s alt-rock of Elastica (“brutal”) and Alanis Morissette (“good 4 u”). To listen to Rodrigo’s debut full-length is to know-on a very deep and almost uncomfortably familiar level-exactly what she was going through when she wrote it at 17. I feel like a song is so much more special when you can visualize and picture it, even smell and taste all of the stuff that the songwriter's going through.” “And I think it’s so impactful and emotional because of how specific it is, how it really paints pictures of scenarios. “I grew up listening to country music,” the California-born singer-songwriter (also an experienced actor and current star of Disney+’s High School Musical: The Musical: The Series) tells Apple Music. The heartbreak, the humiliation, the vertiginous weight of every lonesome thought and outsized feeling-none of that really leaves us, and exploring it honestly almost always makes for good pop songs. If Olivia Rodrigo has a superpower, it’s that, at 18, she already understands that adolescence spares no one.
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