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Alex Warren’s Eternity Lyrics Meaning: A Grief Song Disguised as a Pop Ballad 

By Alex HarrisJuly 19, 2025
Alex Warren’s Eternity Lyrics Meaning: A Grief Song Disguised as a Pop Ballad 

Some songs try to console. Eternity doesn’t. It just sits there with you, quietly overwhelmed.

Alex Warren You’ll Be Alright, Kid album cover
Alex Warren You’ll Be Alright, Kid album cover

As track one on You’ll Be Alright, Kid, Alex Warren’s debut album released on 18 July 2025, it doesn’t ease you in.

It opens the door and shows you the hardest part first. It’s a welcome and a wound.

It wastes no time explaining itself. “Hear the clock ticking on the wall” isn’t poetic ambience.

It’s time passing…all the hours, months, and years Warren has spent without his parents.

His father died of cancer when he was nine. His mother later lost her life to alcohol addiction. That backstory isn’t decoration.

He shared it on Instagram not to dramatise, but to explain where Eternity came from.

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Alex Warren (@alexwarren)

The production, led by Adam Yaron, gives the track room to ache.

It’s sparse, built around piano chords that builds slowly, the arrangement begins to swell, not dramatically, but in a way that makes each moment feel heavier than the last.

The choir that emerges behind Warren’s vocal doesn’t just complement him. It feels like a presence.

His voice starts alone and is soon surrounded by harmonies that echo like ghosts. The result isn’t comforting. It’s disorienting in a way that feels honest.

Like grief when you’ve stopped trying to manage it. This one comes after Ordinary and On My Mind featuring ROSÉ of BLACKPINK.

Ordinary gave us something glossy and grand, a love song that took over the charts for six weeks.

On My Mind pulled everything inwards, what we called “a nostalgic spiral drenched in subtext and surrender.”

Eternity doesn’t follow either of their moods. It strips everything back and leaves just the ache.

The chorus repeats like a thought that keeps coming back, not because it’s catchy but because it never feels finished.

Each return adds a layer – a subtle harmony here, a rising hum there.

It builds, but not toward release. It just gets heavier. By the end, the vocals sound like they’re collapsing in on themselves.

There’s something almost surreal about the layering. The backing vocals feel angelic but detached, as if the moment is too fragile to hold together.

The lyrics don’t reach for clever metaphors. “Why’d you have to chase the light / Somewhere I can’t go?” is not a riddle.

It’s the blunt truth of living after someone else’s death. There’s no comfort in it, just distance. The light is out of reach, and so are they.

The structure mirrors that feeling. It circles. It hesitates.

Most of the track is spent on variations of the same few lines, not out of lack but because that’s what grief does.

It repeats itself until it becomes routine. “It’s a hell that I call home” lands near the end, but it doesn’t feel like a climax.

It’s just an acceptance of what staying behind looks like. The decision to start the album here makes the rest of it feel different.

You’ll Be Alright, Kid isn’t trying to sound polished from the jump.

It begins with a moment Warren clearly didn’t write for radio.

Eternity doesn’t move toward healing. It sits in what’s left. And people felt that.

The audio version quickly picked up attention on YouTube and TikTok, driven by early fan edits and reactions.

On TikTok, the chorus started circulating before the official release.

The reaction wasn’t loud, but it was immediate.

That’s probably because Eternity doesn’t push you to feel anything. It just plays, and if you’ve been through loss, it already knows what you’ll hear in it.

The clock starts ticking, and before you even realise it, you’ve been holding your breath.

You might also like:

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  • David Kushner: The Journey to Skin and Bones
  • Skye Newman’s Family Matters Lyrics: A Stark, Unfiltered Look at Inherited Pain
  • Conan Gray Vodka Cranberry Lyrics Meaning: A Raw Breakup Confession That Stings Twice

Alex Warren Eternity Lyrics

Verse 1
Hear the clock ticking on the wall
Losing sleep, losing track of the tears I cry
Every drop is a waterfall
Every breath is a break in the riptide

Pre-Chorus
Oh, how long has it been? I don’t know

Chorus
But it feels like an eternity
Since I had you here with me
Since I had to learn to be
Someone you don’t know
To be with you in paradise
What I wouldn’t sacrifice
Why’d you have to chase the light
Somewhere I can’t go?

Post-Chorus
As I walk this world alone
As I walk this world alone

Verse 2
Another glimpse of what could’ve been (Ooh)
Another dream, another way that it nevеr was
Falling back in the wilderness (Ooh)
Waking up, rubbing salt in thе cut

Pre-Chorus
Oh, how long has it been? I don’t know

Chorus
But it feels like an eternity
Since I had you here with me
Since I had to learn to be
Someone you don’t know
To be with you in paradise
What I wouldn’t sacrifice
Why’d you have to chase the light
Somewhere I can’t go?

Post-Chrous
As I walk this world alone (Alone, alone)
As I walk this world alone (Alone, alone)

Bridge
It’s an endless night, it’s a starless sky
It’s a hell that I call home (Hell that I call home)
It’s a long goodbye on the other side
Of the only life I know

Chorus
And it feels like an eternity (Mm)
Since I had you here with me
Since I had to learn to be (Mm)
Someone you don’t know (Woah)
To be with you in paradise
What I wouldn’t sacrifice
Why’d you have to chase the light
Somewhere I can’t go?

Outro
As I walk this world alone
As I walk this world alone

Previous ArticleReneé Rapp Why Is She Still Here Lyrics Meaning: Not a Love Triangle, a Haunting
Next Article Strange Game by Mick Jagger: Terrible Theme Song or Perfect Fit?

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