Bourbon Sons “Sirens” is a type of silence that’s louder than noise, and it only seeps in once the party has ended and the consequences of your own decisions finally weigh on you. “Sirens,” help you embrace that silence and allow it to speak.
“Sirens” is about regret, temptation, and the irrevocable consequences of our own decision-making. It’s a song that does not seek to outrun the past, it stands still and hears it. Rooted in bedrock solemnity rather than tower-of-power overstatement, the song simmers with frayed tension, catching the desperate impulse to flee from failings that won’t stay buried. Some sins don’t wash away, they echo, they call, they wait.
Guitarist and songwriter Dallas Dwight puts it, “Sirens" is about that voice you can’t run from, the one reminding you of things you have done and things you’ve lost. It’s less bombastic than what we’ve done before, but it is telling a deeper tale. We wanted to let the emotion do the heavy lifting.
“Sirens” does not provide redemption or a neat closure. It offers honesty. It captures that late-night reckoning, when temptation and regret become indistinguishable from one another, when you realize that running only amplifies the voice.
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