February 3rd - Jorja Smith

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February 3rd Lyrics

[Verse 1]
There's a life outside I didn't know
Tied up, falling down to this empty soul
And lord knows that this love has taken toll
I've given all of my love to this broken home

[Chorus]
So why don't you lose yourself for me
Why don't you lose yourself for me
What is it that your eyes don't see
Why don't you lose yourself for me
Why don't you lose yourself, for me

[Verse 2]
It won't work if it don't make sense at all
I'm so lost that I can't see through the fall
The same stains that were left from the cherry whine
The same stains that I wish we could both rewind

[Verse 3]
Did you notice that the feeling ain't happy no more
Did you notice it's the feeling you've been running from
You wouldn't notice if your eyes ain't falleing for me
Did you open up my heart, did you take it from me

[Chorus]
So why don't you lose yourself for me
Why don't you lose yourself for me
What is it that your eyes don't see
Why don't you lose yourself for me
So why don't you lose yourself for me
Why don't you lose yourself for me

[Outro]
You lose yourself from playing games
Lose yourself, it ain't the same
You lose yourself from playing games
You lose yourself, it ain't the same

Lyrics provided by LyricsEver.com

Jorja Smith is an English singer from Walsall, UK. Smith impressed many and earned attention with her hip-hop and R&B-inspired debut single "Blue Lights" and has taken the rest of the year to deliver songs that fuse soul, blues, and even classical. She spent much of 2016 getting people very excited about her effortless, informed, and deeply soulful pop with a trio of eclectic singles. Her first EP Project 11 arrives so perfectly formed it almost feels like showing off. Many songs mark Smith out as her hero Amy Winehouse’s truest successor.

Smith has been performing since the age of 8 and writing songs since 11, amassing a broad catalog of mostly unreleased tracks that skew from pop to modern soul. One of the earliest songs she remembers writing was called “High Street,” about when all the stores in her hometown of Walsall, in the midwest of England, closed during the economic recession of the late-’00s, leaving behind a hollow ghost town. Walsall is a run-down place, Smith said, with “a lot of creative people, but not many possibilities.”








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Jorja Smith