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Heatmakerz, who did the majority of the production on full-length From Me to U, stapled together a sample from Cornball British act Air Supply’s tune Making Love out of Nothing to layers of opera singing from Dipset rando Opera Steve. The result is a truly bizarre and amazing beat.

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What is this?

The Genius annotation is the work of the Genius Editorial project. Our editors and contributors collaborate to create the most interesting and informative explanation of any line of text. It’s also a work in progress, so leave a suggestion if this or any annotation is missing something.

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A full quarter of “Turn On the Lights” passes before the beat finally drops, but it’s that floaty and ambient structure that makes Future’s longing so articulate.

It also made a surprise hit for both the artist and its producer—Mike WiLL Made It. The track hit #2 on the R&B/Hip-Hop charts, effectively launching both of their careers. In a Complex interview, Mike WiLL said of the song:

Future was like, “Man, basically you’re telling me to sing it. What are you trying to turn me into, an R&B singer?” I was like, “Bob Marley wasn’t no R&B singer. You know you’re not an R&B singer. You just got an ill tone.”

The breakthrough helped define Future’s strange and lyrical sound, setting the stage for another equally successful single, a star-studded sophomore album, and a new movement in hip-hop, one that stretches from Young Thug to Desiigner. Yet despite both collaborators' tremendous futures, “Turn On the Lights” remains unique in its sound and vision.

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Doves are a worldwide symbol of peace. They are gentle and beautiful. Prince and his lover care about each other so much—their arguments are as tragic as doves crying.

Humans see doves—and birds in general—as docile, harmless creatures. Prince contrasts these animals with the selfish, violent behavior of arguing lovers to uncover the scared, helpless feelings that lay beneath hurtful words.

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