Edited by: Vyshnevi Satheesh
Like most people, my taste in music is so personal and individual to me that Iām almost āarrogantā about it. I like being the girl who listens to crazy obscure indie cum bedroom pop artists, vintage punk, and 30ās jazz and actually likes it for it and not just for the sake of being different. Thatās just an added plus. And as horrible, selfish (and ironically, basic) as it sounds, I do like being put in a box and putting other artists in that box with me. Although I donāt look down on people who are into other genres, (or no genre at all), I just donāt gel well with people who like pop music. But because of this āarroganceā, publicly listening to pop music I actually like every once in a while is humiliation like no other. And itās even worse when I declare I hate a song when it first comes out, but am jamming to it a couple of weeks later; full volume and hairbrush in hand.Ā
Falling in love with a song after hating it for so long happens to so many of us, but it is rare. You can learn to like the music you hate or have it grow on you, of course, but how often does that come naturally? More often than not, there are certain instances or moments where you hear a song completely against your will, and all the āgoodā parts end up sticking in your head. Other times, you resonate with its lyrics and what itās trying to say. Here are three stories of how I grew to love popular songs I HATED before. I know nobody asked, Iām just telling you anyway.
- Drivers License, Olivia RodrigoĀ
Yep. I hated Drivers License when it first came out. Donāt get me wrong, I absolutely adore ballads and emo songs, no matter who itās by. This particular one just felt musically empty and poorly written with cringey, lovesick omg-i-was-so-in-love-with-you lyrics. It wasnāt a BAD song, I just didnāt get the hype. Until, of course, I reached campus in my second semester. Iād get up every Tuesday and Thursday morning, hit the showers (communal, of course) at exactly 9:15, and in the stall beside mine, thereād be another girl showering. Sheād play this song, full volume, first thing in the morning every time, and sob so loud like she didnāt care at all. It made me so uncomfortable I literally ran out of the shower. Until of course, I came late one day and heard the bridge for the very first time. Thatās when Olivia got me.Ā
- Sheila Ki Jawani, Sunidhi Chauhan
I love this song. It is my all-time favourite, and Iām not afraid to say it. Itās so badass it puts Cardi to shame. And thatās actually whatās so sad, most people donāt what itās really about. I used to pigeonhole this one into the āitem numberā category; songs I have no interest in or respect for, and rightfully so. Until my roommate started playing her angry-girl/men-suck playlist to cheer me up from yet another heartbreak; Sheila Ki Jawaani in the midst of all the Avril, Alanis, Taylor Swift, and Bikini Kill. I realized then that it was actually about self-love and masturbation. Bar Katrina Kaifās hypersexualization in the movie during this song, sheās trying to say that she donāt need no man, and I stan.Ā
- Any and all Drake
Itās not an Ashokanās party if thereās no Drake. Or so Iāve been told. Didnāt like or dislike the dude, didnāt like his music, just thought he and everything he did was justā¦average. I donāt have a problem with hip-hop and R&B, just thought he was overhyped. But when you see so many of your friends screaming and cheering with joy every time his songs come on at a party, itās hard not to eventually learn to love it too. Just because the people around you do as well. Itās even harder to get that image out of your head when you see how terribly they dance to the songs.
Bottom line is, no matter how much we insist, we canāt control the songs we like. At the end of the day, itās all about the people we surround ourselves with, and how that music bonds us together.