Caitlyn King - Raye's Hard Out Here

Occasionally, I get Christian music on my social media pages.

One audio that I have seen a lot of recently is a clip of RAYE's song Hard Out Here in which she says, "You start to wonder why I'm Christian: Without the Lord, I'd take my life for all the times I've been a victim." and then quotes Isaiah 54:17:
No weapon formed against me shall ever prosper

 And so I paid a visit to Spotify and gave the song a listen.

RAYE starts the song asking for the audience to give the song a listen and open their ears to her truth. She compares her pen to a gun, a more modern version of the pen-is-mightier-than-the-sword, however in this case the pen IS her weapon. She says that she will start to spray now, but instead of bullets it's words. She's using her words as an attack towards people who have wronged her, which in this case is mainly her old records company, Polydor Records.

She compares Polydor Records to a dungeon, describing how she felt trapped with their demands and ways of doing things. RAYE's from a poorer neighborhood, and she felt like she couldn't authentically be herself while with Polydor Records as they wanted different types of music. It was this, along with some other problems that led to RAYE using drugs. It's then that RAYE says the lines I quoted above.

RAYE fell back into faith, saying that she felt like God saved her from suicide, and so no one would ever succeed in breaking her faith in Him. But it's also a statement that with God, RAYE feels more protected and confident.


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