Metalcore veterans We Came As Romans are back with their first new song in 3 years with “Bad Luck”.
The band has long worn their hearts on their sleeves, known for creating emotionally driven metal anthems that blur the line between inner struggle and sonic aggression. “Bad Luck” takes a particularly introspective route, not just thematically, but spiritually. This track hits a personal nerve for both the band and fans, diving deep into pain, growth, and the acceptance of scars that never quite fade.
From Struggle to Strength: Decoding the Meaning of “Bad Luck”
Speaking about the track, vocalist Dan Stephens states:
Bad Luck is a song that is so important to each of us. Lyrically, it’s about our journey as a band since the very beginning. We’ve faced so many setbacks and problems behind the scenes, and sometimes it feels like Bad Luck is all we have – but the way that we’ve persevered through all of them to become who we are today is the real story, not the issues along the way.
At its core, “Bad Luck” is a meditation on hardship, isolation, and emotional endurance. The opening lines – “I think I think too much, yeah, I know / It’s all in my head, can’t let it go” – set the tone for a lyrical journey through anxiety and self-doubt. These thoughts aren’t abstract either; they feel like echoes of personal demons, mental loops, and ghosts from the past that refuse to fade. There’s a sense of someone trying to outpace their own mind but continually being dragged back into its depths.
The chorus is where the song’s message truly comes to light:
“I spent all my life wondering why the bad luck always comes so easy / All this time, I’ve realized the worst things in life are free.”
This line alone speaks volumes. It’s a raw confession of how pain often feels inevitable and inescapable. It suggests a resignation at first, but the verses that follow quickly shift that narrative toward a quieter strength: scars that once symbolised suffering become signs of survival.
When Stephens sings “They’re all my scars, my bad luck to keep / And you can’t take that from me,” it’s both defiant and proud. The pain, though unwanted, has become part of his identity. There’s power in owning your pain rather than pretending it never existed.
This is especially potent when considering the band’s real-life context. The tragic passing of clean vocalist Kyle Pavone in 2018 devastated the band, and “Bad Luck” feels like a continuation of the emotional dialogue that began in Cold Like War and intensified in Darkbloom. Each new song since then carries the shadow of grief, but also a light that grows stronger with each release.
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We Came As Romans Bad Luck Lyrics In Full
Turning Misfortune Into Identity
“Bad Luck” may sound straightforward on the surface, but underneath, it’s something much more profound: an anthem of resilience. We Came As Romans don’t just mourn their misfortunes – they turn them into something stronger. This song stands tall as a testament to surviving the worst and still moving forward, even when the world hands you every reason not to.
In a genre that often thrives on catharsis, “Bad Luck” feels especially personal. It’s not a song that asks for sympathy, it seeks understanding and a reminder that scars are not shameful; they’re proof you fought, lived and moved forward.
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