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"Cod'ine" (also spelled "Codine" or "Codeine") is a contemporary folk song by the singer-songwriter Buffy Sainte-Marie. Considered one of the earliest anti-drug songs, Sainte-Marie wrote the piece after becoming addicted to codeine which she had been given for a bronchial infection.
Majesty (song) Make tha Trap Say Aye; Mama (Loves a Crackhead) Mary Jane's Last Dance; Mask Off; Master of Puppets (song) Medicate (Gabbie Hanna song) Million Miles an Hour; Minnie the Moocher; Molly (Lil Pump song) Molly (16 Candles Down the Drain) Monkey (song) Monkey Man (Rolling Stones song) Monkey on My Back; Moonlight Mile (song) Mother's ...
The instrumental of the song, made up of plucked synths and a theremin, has been described as "relatively restrained and upbeat". [5] Lyrically, Macklemore discusses his personal struggles with drug abuse and addiction, [2] [4] [5] [6] and their impact on his mental health.
The song tells the attempts of Tommy's parents to try to cure him. They leave him with an eccentric gypsy, a self-proclaimed "Acid Queen", who feeds Tommy various hallucinogenic drugs and performs sexually in an attempt to free him from isolation.
Erie native, musician and recovering addict writes song "Without the Bottle" in rehab, ... achieved after years of abusing drugs and alcohol and a stay in rehab. The Erie native, a 34-year-old ...
Macklemore has struggled with drug abuse in the past and publicly spoken about the issue, including in previous songs such as "Otherside". "Drug Dealer" was released in preparation for his discussion with President Barack Obama about the opioid addiction epidemic on the MTV documentary Prescription For Change: Ending America's Opioid Crisis, which aired on the same day of the song's release.
Demi Lovato says their new song "Happy Ending" was written in "an incredibly dark place.". The singer, who returned to rehab in December amid their addiction and mental health struggles, shared a ...
The first verse is most explicitly about drugs. [3] It describes how difficult it is to get free of drugs once addicted, and recovered addict who is now finally free sings "no more." [3] Writer Ken Beilen describes the second verse as an attempt by the former addict to recover his muse and creativity now that he does not have drugs to fall back ...