If You’re Crushing on Someone, Hana Eid’s “Weird” Is For You
âSecond-guessing, second-guessing myself all the time / Counting out my footsteps as I walk the tight line.â
Having a grade school crush can be exhilaratingâpurposefully taking the longer route to class because you know youâll pass by them, going to events you normally wouldnât attend because you know theyâll be there, and essentially making up any and every excuse to be in their presence... only to admire them from afar. But when it comes to actually speaking to that personâand God forbid expressing your feelings to themâhaving a crush can quickly become terrifying, anxiety-inducing, and quite literally soul-crushing. Crushes are weird. Feelings are weird. And singer-songwriter Hana Eidâs latest single, âWeird,â captures all of the tricky emotions accompanying the experience of having those silly little feelings of love for someone.
âWeirdâ is a song for anyone crushing; whether it be on a close friend, a coworker, a local barista, or a person who sat across from you in class, âWeirdâ expresses the inner conflict that comes with finally admitting to yourself, and that certain âsomeone,â that you might just like them a little bit more than a friend (or a coworker, or a barista, or a stranger). From wanting to spend the night, but going home instead, and wanting to grow old together, but choosing to stay quiet, Eidâs songwriting is as vulnerable as it is relatable, letting the listener hear her innermost thoughts and fantasies in the form of a Notes app diary entry. In a chorus that you canât help but rock out to, Eid sings, âI wanna talk about it and I wanna talk to you, I wanna understand what I feel and I think I know I do.â
While âWeirdâ is primarily driven by its lyrics and imagery, the track is modern indie rock at its finest. Itâs almost as if Briston Maroney, Ethel Cain, and The Japanese House got in the studio and decided to pick up some instruments and see what happens (spoiler alert: what happens is really, insanely tasteful.) Electric guitar riffs, a pulsing bassline, and a drum kit accompany Eidâs vocals wrapped in angst, honesty, and the slightest degree of admiration. âWeirdâ is unapologetic, and perhaps that is why it feels so familiar.
âWeirdâ is the kind of song I wish I had as a teenager. Having a first crush that felt like the most important thing in the world and not understanding how to make sense of those feelingsâinstead, keeping them bottled insideâhoping everything would magically sort itself out.
Listen to "Weird" below: