Tell Me Why

Album: F--k Love (2020)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • While most of The Kid Laroi's debut mixtape, F--k Love, details the Australian rapper's newfound disdain for romance after a messy breakup, its second single, "Tell Me Why," is about the painful loss of a different kind of relationship. Laroi lets his emotions flow on the heartwrenching track, recorded in the aftermath of his friend and mentor Juice Wrld's fatal overdose in December 2019. He tries to mask his pain with alcohol and other substances but knows he needs to find a better way to deal with his grief before he suffers the same fate as his friend:

    Cause if I keep thinking 'bout our memories
    Then it's gon' be in memory of me
  • This was the first song Laroi recorded after Juice's death. After spending a few weeks in Juice's hometown of Chicago following his passing, Laroi returned to Los Angeles, ready to make music. Working with producers Taz Taylor and Rio Leyva at Internet Money Records on the track, Laroi freestyled the lyrics and the song came together within 30 minutes.

    "I listened to it and I was just like, 'Damn, this is good.' Yeah, I was really in love with it. It was like for two or three months that I had it and I was just sitting with it. I never got sick of it," he said in a 2020 Genius interview. "I loved the song. I actually fell in love with my own song, which I never really do."
  • Juice Wrld, who appears on F--k Love's previous single, "Go!," was instrumental in putting The Kid Laroi on the map. After opening for the rapper on his 2018 and 2019 Australian tours, Laroi - who signed with Juice's label, Lil Bibby's Grade A Productions - moved to Los Angeles and bunked with Juice and his entourage for his first three months in the city. In the meantime, the 16-year-old soaked up all the knowledge he could about the recording process by watching his mentor in the studio.

    "He would be in the studio obviously every day recording f--king a million songs, and I would go in there and just watch him and watch how he was doing s--t," Laroi told Beats 1 radio host Zane Lowe.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

The 10 Bands Most Like Spinal Tap

The 10 Bands Most Like Spinal TapSong Writing

Based on criteria like girlfriend tension, stage mishaps and drummer turnover, these are the 10 bands most like Spinal Tap.

Pam Tillis

Pam TillisSongwriter Interviews

The country sweetheart opines about the demands of touring and talks about writing songs with her famous father.

Chris Robinson of The Black Crowes

Chris Robinson of The Black CrowesSongwriter Interviews

"Great songwriters don't necessarily have hit songs," says Chris. He's written a bunch, but his fans are more interested in the intricate jams.

A Monster Ate My Red Two: Sesame Street's Greatest Song Spoofs

A Monster Ate My Red Two: Sesame Street's Greatest Song SpoofsSong Writing

When singers started spoofing their own songs on Sesame Street, the results were both educational and hilarious - here are the best of them.

Ed Roland of Collective Soul

Ed Roland of Collective SoulSongwriter Interviews

The stories behind "Shine," "December," "The World I Know" and other Collective Soul hits.

Janet Jackson

Janet JacksonFact or Fiction

Was Janet secretly married at 18? Did she gain 60 pounds for a movie role that went to Mariah Carey? See what you know about Ms. Jackson.