
"Youth Without Youth" tackles the subject of a fraying social state through the eyes of a deprived youth, and is about a troubled youth was inspired by the spiraling student loan debt, which at the time it was written had reached $1 trillion in America. Haines said that the track's inspiration "started as just one verse, a very slow, sad story, and the song grew from there. The lyrics trace innocence lost as childlike games grow into teenaged trouble, and these words are buoyed by a glammy, sleazy, danceable sound.
Lyrically, Haines toys with powerful imagery, using phrases like double dutch with a hand grenade, and "rubber soul with a razor blade to describe a young life full of malaise and even criminality. "Youth Without Youth," is far more striking with its funky riff, blending nicely with Haines' honeyed tones, and it is a glam sugar with a bitter core. Perennial indie crush Haines drops a wasted-youth anthem with scarred poetry like 'We played blindman's bluff till they stopped the game,' over a bleak-bubblegum stomp.
Haines ignites some powerful, heady sociopolitical messages atop fuzzed-out electro-rocking melodies and rhythms in Justin Broadbent-Directed clip, which is the most '90s-MTV thing I've seen in a while. It opens with a stomping, strutty beat that ushers in Haines, who's flicking lighters. In a drably colored room, back-in-the-day childhood imagery is juxtaposed with more violent material, mirroring the song's sentiment. There's a girl building a multi-tiered birthday cake, a bunny rabbit, a stuffed animal and football, all interspersed with guns, handcuffs and grenade.
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