Williams-love Somebody Lyrics: Robbie
: The line "There’s just no pleasing me" suggests that the barrier to love is internal rather than external.
Robbie Williams ' song (from his 2002 album Escapology ) explores themes of restlessness, yearning for connection, and the struggle to find "real" love in a world that often feels artificial or fleeting. Robbie Williams-Love somebody lyrics
While "Love Somebody" focuses on the search for an external person to fill a void, Williams later pivoted to themes of . : The line "There’s just no pleasing me"
In the bridge, the song takes a spiritual turn: "It’ll come in your sweet time, Lord / I’ve just got to let you in" . Here, the "love" Williams seeks shifts from the romantic to the existential. He describes a state of "the blind leading the blind" and finally concludes that only love has the power to "set you free". In the bridge, the song takes a spiritual
The lyrics open with a sense of eternal searching: "Always and forever, is forever young / Your shadow on the pavement, the dark side of the sun" . Williams sets a scene of constant movement and unfulfilled dreams. This restlessness is a common theme in his earlier work, reflecting a "pop star" exhaustion where despite fame, the artist feels like a "stranger in a country that I have yet to meet".
: References to "all the damage done" imply that previous heartbreaks or mistakes make current attempts at connection feel fragile. 3. Spiritual and Existential Yearning