Song Meaning
The lyrics of "Get It Right" capture an urgent, almost exasperated plea from an observer to someone struggling. The speaker notes, "I heard that you fell down," acknowledging a difficult situation. This is quickly followed by an intense, repeated demand: "Is for you to get it rite." The tone is direct, insistent, and tinged with a frustrated concern.
There's a clear tension between the speaker's awareness of the subject's plight and their impatience with the perceived self-sabotage. The lines "Always make things look so hard" and the blunt warning "you won't get far" suggest a history of the subject making things unnecessarily difficult. This isn't just about falling; it's about a pattern the speaker has observed, fueling their persistent desire for a change in behavior.
The deliberate misspelling of "rite" instead of "right" is a subtle but potent craft choice. It elevates the meaning beyond mere correctness or adherence to rules. Instead, "get it rite" suggests a specific, perhaps intuitive or deeply personal alignment – a way of being or doing that the speaker believes is essential, rather than just a universally accepted standard. This particular "rite" feels less about moral rectitude and more about finding a crucial, perhaps spiritual, path.
This urgency takes on a new, vulnerable dimension with the sudden revelation: "You don't know me / Why can't you see? / I wanna stay." These lines transform the earlier pleas from simple advice into a desperate attempt to maintain a hidden connection. The subsequent advice – "Watch where you go / Don't move too slow / Don't fade away" – becomes less about nagging and more about a profound fear of loss, revealing the depth of the speaker's unacknowledged care and their desire for the subject to remain present and visible.