· Marcus Adetola · Reviews

Tiger La Flor Hollywood Cemetery: A Lyrical Journey Through Dreams and Desolation

<p>In her hauntingly beautiful track hollywood cemetery, Japanese-Korean-American songstress Tiger La Flor transports us into a world where dreams are both made and mourned. Her sound, a delicate tapestry of ethereal melancholy, is interwoven with a distinctly Western-tinged dreamscape, creating a sonic experience that is as poignant as it is profound. With a voice that [&hellip;]</p>

In her hauntingly beautiful track hollywood cemetery, Japanese-Korean-American songstress Tiger La Flor transports us into a world where dreams are both made and mourned.

Her sound, a delicate tapestry of ethereal melancholy, is interwoven with a distinctly Western-tinged dreamscape, creating a sonic experience that is as poignant as it is profound.

With a voice that exudes the sultry allure of a bygone era, Tiger La Flor weaves a narrative rich in ambition and disillusionment.

The lyrics, saturated with a raw hedonism and a defiant renunciation of the quintessential “American dream,” craft a narrative that exudes an epic, nostalgic charm.

The track is a mesmerising concoction of haunting melodies and incisive lyrics—a sonic homage to the seductive yet perilous allure of fame.

“Never wanted the American dream,” Tiger La Flor declares, her voice resonating like a bittersweet reverberation amidst the lustrous strumming of guitars and the mesmeric rhythms of percussion.

Each stanza of the song paints a vivid picture, a cinematic snapshot capturing the essence of life under the neon-lit aura of Hollywood.

Tiger La Flor’s storytelling takes us through the underbelly of glitz and glamour, from clandestine encounters in dimly lit hotel rooms to the yearning for eternal recognition among Tinseltown’s celestial bodies.

Hollywood cemetery stands as a lyrical monument, an ode to the icons who have fallen but whose legends persist.

It is an invitation from Tiger La Flor to find solace in the darkness, to discover splendour amidst the wreckage of forsaken vows and fragmented dreams.

Tiger La Flor See Me in Hell Ep cover
Tiger La Flor see me in hell EP cover

This evocative piece is a highlight of her debut EP, see me in hell, which is currently available now.

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Tiger La Flor hollywood cemetery Lyrics

Kiss her when i’m not around 
Asking out the waitress didn’t make a sound
Shooting morphine in the bathtub lipstick on your mouth
Say you don’t remember

Bury me in hollywood 
Like you said you would
I done bad but i look damn good

Never wanted the american dream
Picket fence and a family
Never said i’d be a saint
Being good is for holidays
Never wanted to win prom queen 
Said i don’t care who voted for me
All i ever wanted was to be 
Buried in hollywood cemetery
Hollywood hollywood cemetery 
Hollywood hollywood cemetery
 

Hotel lobby after dark, meet me in the elevator after you go park 
She might have your baby but i have your heart
Film me all night honey ima be a star

Bury me in hollywood 
Like you said you would
I done bad but i look damn good

Never wanted the american dream
Picket fence and a family
Never said i’d be a saint
Being good is for holidays
Never wanted to win prom queen 
Said i don’t care who voted for me
All i ever wanted was to be 
Buried in hollywood cemetery
Hollywood hollywood cemetery 
Hollywood hollywood cemetery

Remember the wild adventures
Thought the high would last forever
Drove my car off malibu
Love it fades but i did better
Only diamonds last forever
Mark these words on my tomb 
Never wanted to win prom queen 
All i ever wanted was to be
Buried in hollywood cemetery

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