Jason Derulo - Broken Record W -

He pressed play again. The beat kicked in, a driving, insistent rhythm that forced his feet to move even as his heart stayed heavy. He started to freestyle, his voice climbing into that signature falsetto. "How can I make it up to you? Your wish is my command."

He thought of Maya. He could still see the way her expression had shifted from anger to a cold, quiet exhaustion the last time they spoke. "You’re like a broken record, Jason," she had said, her voice barely a whisper. "The same promises, the same lies, just played at a different volume." Jason Derulo - Broken Record w

"I’m sorry, sorry, sorry," his own voice echoed back through the monitors, stripped of the usual polished autotune. It sounded raw, desperate—the sound of a man who had run out of new ways to say the same thing. He pressed play again

He knew he didn't deserve another chance. He had been a "mess" since she left, his life a chaotic remix of regret. The studio, once his sanctuary, now felt like a confessional. Every track he produced was just another attempt to fix a rhythm that had been off for years. "How can I make it up to you

He reached out and adjusted a fader, trying to bury the guilt in a layer of reverb. But the lyrics were relentless. Every time I lie, your ears bleed with pain. He had written those words in a moment of clarity, a rare flash of honesty he usually reserved for his songwriting and never for his life.

of his songwriting process in the studio.

He pressed play again. The beat kicked in, a driving, insistent rhythm that forced his feet to move even as his heart stayed heavy. He started to freestyle, his voice climbing into that signature falsetto. "How can I make it up to you? Your wish is my command."

He thought of Maya. He could still see the way her expression had shifted from anger to a cold, quiet exhaustion the last time they spoke. "You’re like a broken record, Jason," she had said, her voice barely a whisper. "The same promises, the same lies, just played at a different volume."

"I’m sorry, sorry, sorry," his own voice echoed back through the monitors, stripped of the usual polished autotune. It sounded raw, desperate—the sound of a man who had run out of new ways to say the same thing.

He knew he didn't deserve another chance. He had been a "mess" since she left, his life a chaotic remix of regret. The studio, once his sanctuary, now felt like a confessional. Every track he produced was just another attempt to fix a rhythm that had been off for years.

He reached out and adjusted a fader, trying to bury the guilt in a layer of reverb. But the lyrics were relentless. Every time I lie, your ears bleed with pain. He had written those words in a moment of clarity, a rare flash of honesty he usually reserved for his songwriting and never for his life.

of his songwriting process in the studio.