Maude Latour Searches for Beauty in Loss in "Cyclone"
If there is one thing I am coming to understand as a twenty-something, itâs that the people you were once close with are going to fade out of your life, and itâs one of the most challenging realizations to come to terms with. The âsorry I forgot to replyâ texts turn into once-a-year âhappy birthdaysâ with the occasional sentence or two about âhow lucky you are to have them as a friendâ until, suddenly, thereâs a silent-yet-mutual acknowledgment that the two of you have drifted away from one another. Sometimes, our individual life circumstances bring us together, and other times, they cause us to grow apart. In Maude Latourâs latest single âCyclone,â the singer-songwriter disguises the slow burn of a fleeting friend in the form of a perfect pop song.
âCycloneâ feels like reaching the last page of a book that you didnât want to end, despite knowing that, eventually, it had to. Maudeâs songwriting is vulnerable and honest, capturing the feeling of missing someoneâand loving that someoneâeven though you are no longer a part of each otherâs lives. Even if you have mastered the art of being alone, it doesnât always make that personâs absence any easier to cope with. The lyricism of âCycloneâ captures the conundrum of whether or not the act of loving is supposed to be easy, as Maude sings, âGrowing pains, push away, Need space, I know you feel the sameâ and âMiss you like a hurricane, spinning cyclone, Tell you life is so long, Even if I'm dead wrong, Love you 'til Iâm all gone.â
I think that âCycloneâ has solidified itself as Maudeâs entrance into her Lorde era. Itâs one of those songs where the lyrics are sadly relatable, but you still want to sing and dance along to it because itâs just so catchy. In three-and-a-half minutes, indie-pop synthesizers and electronic drums teleport the listener into the world of âCyclone,â and it is one that is embellished in ironies: itâs joyful yet sad, light yet dark, like smiling as a tear drips down your cheek. In the same sense as Lordeâs âRibsâ or the 1975âs âSomebody Elseâ, âCycloneâ has a certain kind of charm to it that is warm and nostalgic, like driving through a tunnel at midnight with the windows down.
Simply put, âCycloneâ is a happy-sad bop that feels like the perfect soundtrack to end the summer on.
Listen to "Cyclone" below: