'Plastic Cigarette' Lyrics: Zach Bryan Sings About Self-Destructive Behaviors & End of a Relationship
Zach Bryan just released his new album With Heaven on Top, and one song in particular is getting attention: “Plastic Cigarette.”
The 29-year-old singer-songwriter’s track has already garnered over 5 million streams on Spotify alone, more than any other track on the album, and nearly 300,000 streams on YouTube, more than any of the album tracks.
Keep reading to find out more…
The reflective track finds Zach addressing a relationship that wasn’t stable, and calling out his own self-destructive behaviors.
“Did you ever make it back to Byron Bay the day you told me to quit drinkin’? / And thinkin’ that I was gonna die before thirty, your mom was so worried about / All those kids in the house tearin’ picture frames down / Our fathers were never around when we were younger,” he sings.
“So let me go, I saw you on the river’s edge / Draggin’ on a plastic cigarette / With your swim top still wet / So let it go, meetin’ you out on the coast / You hate the smell of real smoke / So why’d you always keep me so close?”
Just a few months ago, Zach Bryan opened up about his sobriety journey, admitting he really needed “some f–king help.”
“I haven’t touched alcohol for nearly two months now– something I had to do for my own personal clarity,” he said at the time.
He also seemingly addressed his split from a famous ex on some songs, and also released a controversial anti-ICE patriotic song.
Listen to “Plastic Cigarette”…
Read the lyrics to “Plastic Cigarette”…