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People love Ed Sheeran, but a majority of the time, it’s for one reason: his love songs are super romantic.
The song that made Ed Sheeran famous was “A Team” in 2011, which was a song about a prostitute trying to stop her drug addiction. “A Team” is not about love, but this exposer led to people falling in love with other songs in his Plus album like “Give Me Love,” “Lego House,” and “Drunk.” These songs are about heartbreak, but their fame made way to making “Thinking out Loud” and “Photograph” Ed Sheeran’s first love hits, which came from his Multiply album.
Because of this, he had gained the romantic reputation that he was required to make a batch of love songs for his Divide album. From it, “Shape of You” and “Perfect” outranked “Thinking out Loud” and “Photograph” on streaming platforms. “Shape of You” and “Perfect” are also the most played songs on radios.
The requirement then seems to extend to his No.6 Collaborations Project since most of the songs revolve around love. In fact, his song “I Don’t Care” with Justin Bieber ranked number five on Ed Sheeran’s most streamed songs from Billboard.
To add on, Ed Sheeran says he has two boxes to check for his albums. The first one is to write love songs. The second is the space he has to write whatever he wants.
“I feel like I have boxes that I need to tick with my album for me and my fan base. I feel like if I didn’t have love songs on there, people would be like, ‘What are you doing? Like, this is why we like you,’ so there’s like these boxes that I need to tick and there’s like this kind of box that just says unknown where it can be anything, and you can try out any sound. And I feel like as a musician, it’s my job to keep trying different things.”
So because of this reputation, he has continuously written love songs to please his fans, making people see him as a romantic. However, even though the love songs are required, he still writes from his heart and makes them genuine.
As a result, any of his songs make people perceive them as love or heartbreak songs. When in reality, his fans know he’s more than a romantic. Because if he were to remove the love songs, his albums would be chapters of diary entries about different points of his life.
Either or, he’s an artist who keeps evolving and changing.
“If I was then now on my fifth album and I was still making the same thing I was making ten years ago, no one would be interested.”
The title of being a romantic may contrast that since it feels like a stagnant position as a musician. But even though he mainly writes love songs, he experiments with a variety of tunes and beats. No love song, or any song he’s written, sounds like the last, which is why he’s a perfect ghostwriter for other artists.
If you don’t know by now, Ed Sheeran has written a multitude of songs for other artists like “Strip That Down” for Liam Payne, “Cold Water” for Major Lazer, “Lay It All On Me” for Rudimental, “Love Yourself” for Justin Bieber, “Make It Right” for BTS and so much more.
As a matter of fact, when Ed writes a hit, he writes the song with someone else in mind until he’s told it needs to be on his album instead, so then he spends months EDifying it to match his album.
“I’d like written with someone else in mind, and then as soon as someone like my record label boss was like ‘You have to finish this for you,’ it takes a while for me to get my head around that and actually make it fit on the record. So when “Bad Habits” was done, it took like three months of me trying to make it edified and get it to fit on the record.”
Sheeran typically uses his acoustic guitar for all his songs. Sometimes his songs would have beats, occasionally drums, or a piano. Except those sounds were gone in “Bad Habits.”
Ed Sheeran’s song “Bad Habits” resembles techno with a bass beat that makes you want to dance, suggesting that his new album might involve electronic music and its various genres.
Although we can’t be sure if he will dive into electronic music since his upcoming album will be missing his loop pad and replaced with a band. This is because he felt like his weakest songs on the album needed a band, which seemed to give him an existential crisis about his career.
The loop pad has been Ed Sheeran’s artistic signature, so is he stripping a piece of himself by not using it? He doesn’t know, so he’s being experimental with the band until he answers that question.
“I’m sort of testing the waters with it because I’ve kind of played with the loop pad for 15 years, and I’m like ‘Is this my unique selling point, or is this something that I need to build on’… So I just need to work out what’s better and what’s the next step for my career.”
Because of this, we might see experimentation of genres since Ed doesn’t believe in being categorized or known for being in one genre. This is especially true since we’ve seen him dip in a few genres like rap and rock with his collaboration album. So it’s more likely we’ll see Sheeran being experimental in his upcoming album.
“The genre is music, and you just create whatever you want to create.”
Yet despite the band, his new album might involve electronic music.
Before “Bad Habits,” Ed Sheeran had a different single ready to be released. He had one more session before it was complete, but England announced they were opening up.
The original song he picked was depressing Lofi, so he contemplated the song’s vibe with the news and decided to create a dancing tune for his single to uplift people as they go out and have fun again.
Upbeat with dark lyrics, “Bad Habits” is about Ed Sheeran’s bad habits with eating junk food, drinking, and partying, which he didn’t fix until Cherry was pregnant with Lyra.
For the first six months, Sheeran focused on being Cherry’s husband by helping with her pregnancy, but it wasn’t until three months before Lyra’s birth when he realized he should stop drinking.
“I was like if my wife’s water breaks at any point, I want to be able to drive. I don’t want to be sat in front of the tv with a glass of wine and be like I can’t- I can’t drive.”
He also applied this to his daughter’s life and how she needs a dad, not a drunk or a party animal.
“I liked my 20s, I had a great time in my 20s, and I don’t need to bring that in. I don’t need to have any of that come into my daughter’s life.”
With this information, any romantic perception from the song “Bad Habits” can be removed. Yet, that can be hard to do when the word “you” seems to refer to a romantic partner.
Although the “you” actually refers to a piece of himself, a side that’s not good, because it’s the side that indulges in his bad habits, which is exposed when Ed says, “Every pure intention ends when the good times start.” And when this happens, he says, “I'll lose control of the things that I say/ Yeah, I was lookin' for a way out, now I can't escape.”
His acknowledgment of his bad habits is what leads him to “late nights endin’ alone/ Conversations with a stranger I barely know,” which illustrates how he ends up talking to himself about what he has done.
To add on, The word “stranger” emphasizes the ‘other’ that exists in him. Though the fact that he had conversations with them, the word “stranger” also demonstrates the outside body experience of reflection and not understanding how or why this horrible side exists since it’s not who he is.
At the same time, the word “alone” expresses the feeling of guilt and helplessness with his internal battle of bad habits. So when he says, “Swearin' this will be the last, but it probably won’t,” he confirms that he has an addiction.
However, Ed heals. The lyrics don’t express that, but his video does.
In his music video for “Bad Habits,” Sheeran’s a vampire, revealing that he’s a different person when he indulges in his bad habits, which is emphasized when a dummy of himself melts in his hands as CGI people flip and bounce around him.
Seemingly chaotic and random to view, it’s the safe’s way to express the destruction his bad habits have on the people around him. But when the sun comes up, the makeup of Vampire Ed disappears as the sunlight showers him and becomes the original Ed again, which can have two meanings. One, this can support that he’s a different person at night, or two, he learned to heal.
In my opinion, he learned to heal since the group of monsters who were with him decide to hide when the sun comes up. When this happens, I see it as their unwillingness to change since Ed let himself return to who he was before his addictions. And because he changed for his daughter, I also think of this as Ed’s rebirth. But maybe I’m going a bit far with that.
Ultimately, the song “Bad Habits” is Ed’s personal story of his bad habits while revealing a new era of music with his upcoming album that reflects his life in the past four years.
He's gone through so many changes, which his new music will align with. So, for now, we’re left curious until he releases his album at the end of the year.
The way he balances artistry with commercial success is really smart.
Really glad he explained the meaning behind Bad Habits. Changes how I hear the song completely.
Being able to reinvent himself while keeping his core songwriting style is impressive.
The transition from acoustic to electronic actually makes sense with his personal growth.
Its cool to see him challenge himself instead of just sticking to what works.
The article really shows how much thought he puts into every aspect of his music.
Wonder if becoming a father influenced more than just the lyrics in his new music.
Interesting how he uses different sounds to tell different parts of his life story.
His honesty about struggling with bad habits makes the song feel more genuine.
Think this new direction might bring in a whole new audience while keeping his storytelling intact.
Appreciate him being so open about having to meet fan expectations while still pushing boundaries.
The way he describes his creative process shows how much thought goes into every decision.
Never thought about how the you in Bad Habits refers to himself. That's actually pretty deep.
Love that he's growing as an artist but hope he doesn't completely abandon his acoustic roots.
Its fascinating how he can write a dance track about overcoming bad habits and make it work.
The detail about driving his wife to the hospital really humanizes the whole story.
Finding it hard to connect with this new sound but I respect his artistic journey.
You make a good point about the band. But maybe it'll add new dimensions to his performance.
His music evolves as he grows as a person. Thats what makes him such an authentic artist.
Im worried the band might overshadow his intimate performance style that we all fell in love with.
The way he writes about personal experiences but makes them universally relatable is such a gift.
Anyone else excited to see what a full band brings to his live performances?
Its interesting how he views his loop pedal situation. Sometimes our signature moves can become our limitations.
Reading about his thought process behind changing the single makes me respect him more as an artist.
The vampire metaphor is clever. We all have those sides of ourselves we need to keep in check.
His comment about not being the same artist he was 10 years ago really resonates with me.
I actually prefer when he experiments with different genres. Shape of You was also a departure from his usual style and it worked.
The way he balances commercial success with artistic integrity is pretty impressive.
Cannot believe he almost released a depressing lofi track instead of Bad Habits. Talk about reading the room!
Really appreciate how he thinks about genre. Music is music at the end of the day.
Love that he's not afraid to admit he has a formula but also pushes beyond it.
The part about him writing with someone else in mind first explains why his songs work so well for other artists too.
Wonder if his next album will have any acoustic tracks at all or if hes fully committed to this new sound.
Just listened to Bad Habits again after reading this and I hear it completely differently now.
His explanation about the boxes he needs to tick makes so much sense. Must be hard balancing artistic growth with fan expectations.
I find it refreshing that he's honest about needing to write love songs to please fans while still experimenting with other themes.
The article made me realize how strategic Ed is about his career while still being authentic.
Totally see what you mean about following trends, but I think he's putting his own spin on it. The lyrics are still very Ed.
I get that he's evolving but the electronic sound feels like he's just following trends rather than setting them.
Anyone else think its brave how he's willing to risk his romantic reputation to try something different?
Never realized Bad Habits was about his personal struggles. Makes me appreciate the song so much more now.
The way he writes for other artists and then sometimes keeps songs for himself is fascinating. Wonder how many hits we don't know he wrote.
I disagree with him dropping the loop pedal. That's such a huge part of what makes him unique as a performer.
As someone who's followed Ed since Plus, its amazing to see how far he's come while maintaining his songwriting integrity.
The part about him quitting drinking for his daughter is really touching. Shows how becoming a parent changes everything.
This article really opened my eyes about the meaning behind Bad Habits. I always thought it was about a toxic relationship!
I actually miss his acoustic style. Not sure how I feel about this new electronic direction.
Interesting to learn that he initially had a different single planned. Makes me wonder what that lofi track sounded like.
The vampire theme in the music video was unexpected but it works so well with the message about his darker side coming out at night.
I love how Ed Sheeran is evolving his sound while staying true to himself. Bad Habits really shows his growth as an artist.