048 :: LOVE
Update: 2025-09-29
Description
FEATURING
"June Guitar" by Alex G, from Headlights, released by RCA Records in 2025. Listen / Buy direct
TRANSCRIPT
There are some songs I think of as just perfect. It's a silly thing to think about any piece of music, but especially about something as humble as this. Yet there's an unmistakeable quality here, a potent mix of vulnerability, pathos, and yearning – a remarkable delicacy, like a bird that's just landed in the palm of one's hand.
It's sweet, but so strange: the gravelly voice, the uneven melody, a nonchalant hand drum, and this tinny vocal counterpoint. Why should this all come together so beautifully? I can't explain it; I can only say how it makes me feel – how I swell up inside, full of this song's emotion, entranced by its tune, awash in waves of melancholy yet still brimming with hope. See what I mean? It's just perfect.
And here I have to admit that I actually have no idea what this song is about. Heartbreak, surely. But also the wisdom that comes with age. And perhaps, despite this, a lingering wistfulness for youth. But the more I listen, the harder it is to pin the lyrics down. They remain suggestive, evocative, and, most of all, elusive – but that's how our feelings are too sometimes, and so maybe this song is just an apt articulation of inarticulate emotion.
And so it's fitting that this song doesn't end with any definitive statement. The vocals just fade out, a synth chimes in, the accordion returns, and the ensemble builds into this swirl of mixed feelings.
And as I'm also at a loss for words, I'll leave you instead with an image, from this song's music video, which closes with the band joining hands and circling the singer in a game of ring-around-the-rosy. It's incongruous, but it strikes me as the perfect image for this perfect song: dizzying, loving, intimate, childlike, and free.
"June Guitar" by Alex G, from Headlights, released by RCA Records in 2025. Listen / Buy direct
TRANSCRIPT
There are some songs I think of as just perfect. It's a silly thing to think about any piece of music, but especially about something as humble as this. Yet there's an unmistakeable quality here, a potent mix of vulnerability, pathos, and yearning – a remarkable delicacy, like a bird that's just landed in the palm of one's hand.
It's sweet, but so strange: the gravelly voice, the uneven melody, a nonchalant hand drum, and this tinny vocal counterpoint. Why should this all come together so beautifully? I can't explain it; I can only say how it makes me feel – how I swell up inside, full of this song's emotion, entranced by its tune, awash in waves of melancholy yet still brimming with hope. See what I mean? It's just perfect.
And here I have to admit that I actually have no idea what this song is about. Heartbreak, surely. But also the wisdom that comes with age. And perhaps, despite this, a lingering wistfulness for youth. But the more I listen, the harder it is to pin the lyrics down. They remain suggestive, evocative, and, most of all, elusive – but that's how our feelings are too sometimes, and so maybe this song is just an apt articulation of inarticulate emotion.
And so it's fitting that this song doesn't end with any definitive statement. The vocals just fade out, a synth chimes in, the accordion returns, and the ensemble builds into this swirl of mixed feelings.
And as I'm also at a loss for words, I'll leave you instead with an image, from this song's music video, which closes with the band joining hands and circling the singer in a game of ring-around-the-rosy. It's incongruous, but it strikes me as the perfect image for this perfect song: dizzying, loving, intimate, childlike, and free.
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