“Don’t get me wrong” is a ride through the wreckage of a heavy mind, a wounded soul, and a broken world. Written and performed by Flipsn Springs, produced by Lillit, and featuring the haunting vocals of Cät on the hook, this track doesn’t ask for attention – it demands it. Gritty, poetic, and brutally honest, Don’t get me wrong is a modern anti-anthem for everyone who’s ever felt like they’re spinning out of control but still singing along.
From the very first verse, Flipsn drops you straight into a chaotic landscape of violence, survival, and emotional numbness. “Friday night, high, drive by, seeing all them bullets flying by” – the imagery is cinematic and raw, like a blurred memory soaked in smoke and streetlight. It’s not glorification – it’s observation. A world that doesn’t wait, doesn’t care, and never forgets.
Lillit’s production carries the weight of the lyrics with dark, moody textures. The beat is slow-burning, almost meditative, yet loaded with tension. Think rainy alleyways, glowing embers, and headlights in the fog – a perfect match for Flipsn’s storytelling.
At the heart of it all is Cät’s haunting delivery of the hook:
“Oh no, I fuck it all up, drown the whiskey bottle solo…” –
It’s the kind of line you hear shouted at the end of a long night, somewhere between heartbreak and blackout. Her voice brings a melancholic clarity to the chaos, creating a beautiful contrast to Flipsn’s gritted verses. Together, they strike a rare balance between vulnerability and defiance.
In the second verse, the focus shifts inward. “Only trapped when I’m in my mind…” – here the song dives into paranoia, memory, and longing. It’s spiritual and destructive, romantic and reckless. There’s a girl in the picture. There’s a bottle on the table. There’s a fight in the mirror. The fireflies aren’t just poetic – they’re tiny hopes in a pitch-black night.
The final lines don’t resolve anything. They don’t try to. Instead, Flipsn whispers the truth we often avoid: “Close your eyes, listen to the sound, just for a while, bro.” Because sometimes that’s all we can do – listen, feel, survive.
Don’t get me wrong isn’t just a song – it’s a confession dressed as a lullaby. A blurred photo of youth, trauma, love, loss, and everything in between. For anyone who’s ever felt like the world’s too heavy, but the music’s the only thing still holding them up.
Don't get me wrong