Why We No Love "Why You No Love Me"?

By Ella Bernard

Image from the official Sob Rock Zine

 
 

Why we no love “Why You No Love Me”, and what did John Mayer mean when he wrote it? The vexing track “Why You No Love Me” was released in 2021 on his eighth studio album Sob Rock. While Sob Rock did produce some hits, including “New Light” and “Last Train Home”, “Why You No Love Me” didn't get as warm a welcome and was one of the least streamed songs on the album. It did however gain the media’s attention, with many questioning the then 43-year-old artist’s choice of wording, seeing it as an outlier for Mayer’s typical lyrical capacity. The titular phrase “why you no love me” makes up most of the chorus, repeated a total 12 times throughout the song along with other similarly structured lines like “why you no even care?” and “why you no will be there?”.

The track doesn't read like your typical break up song. It doesn’t dive into themes of revenge, resentment, or winning someone back. It’s purely meditative, as the vocalist cannot grasp why, why, why the other doesn’t love them back. In this way, it's very simple and childlike, reflecting the baby-talk grammar seen in the lyrics. It's innocent. 

I am listening to “Why You No Love Me” while writing this, and I’ll admit it’s a really good song. It’s very pretty, although the words are laughable. I find there is something uneasy about the lyrics, something that makes my stomach knot a little when listening to those iconic lines in particular. Logically, I know it's the syntax but in practice, it hits deeper. I cannot relax into John’s gorgeous and lovely guitar because of his choice of lyrics, and maybe this is exactly the feeling he hoped to evoke. By changing “Why You No Love Me” to something of a similar cadence that could easily take its place like “Why Don’t You Love Me” would rob the song of what might be its most moving element. 

In Mayer’s interview with Apple Music, Mayer debriefs Sob Rock’s release; he describes that uneasy feeling I mentioned as the “umami flavor” in the song, serving as the unexpected he was reaching for in creating Sob Rock. Mayer lists “Why You No Love Me” as one of the songs that can serve as a true window into the album’s intention. During the album’s release stream, Mayer reiterates how crucial “Why You No Love Me” is to really getting the album with a really great analogy: “sometimes I call a song a sperm donor for a record—sorry for that crassness of that—and "Why You No Love Me" is sort of the musical sperm donor. I go, oh, the rest of the record can sort of have this DNA in it." So, in a way, it's really “Why You No Love Me” that gives life to Sob Rock and acts as the key to the listener’s experience of the album.

“Why You No Love Me” is certainly unexpected in more ways than just its senseless grammar. “Musically you're on a sailboat… and lyrically it's very, very intense” Mayer says. It's not a very deep song. And it’s not trying to be. The simplicity of the lyrics is what drives it home.

What that meaning is, Mayer speaks to in the Unpacking Sob Rock interview: 

“Those words in that order, that's about getting hurt so deep it hits you right in the kid, where you can't even form sentences correctly. To me the saddest part of it is that it's wrapped up in a soft rock banger. It makes me laugh because the two emotions ram up against each other, and I don't know whether to cry or sway to it, so I just laugh, because the emotional mix is so odd.” 

This is exactly the feeling that “Why You No Love Me” absolutely nails in my opinion. Once you get over the lyrics being quite alien, the track replicates the sensation of shrinking to the size of a child when you’re hurt. Mayer explains, “‘why you no love me’ is how I have spoken those words in past relationships… It is the child… It's not English as a second language, but it’s language as a second language. How is it possible that you don't love me?”  

It's as if the lyrics are spoken with the limited vocabulary of a child to express the feeling they can’t yet articulate fully but can fully experience. “And it's funny, as all things that are brutal are when you're an adult”, recognizing the innate comedic nature of the wording. This would become a theme throughout the creative process of recording Sob Rock. “I knew I was getting somewhere with the album when I laughed. Not because it was insincere or jokey - it's unexpected.” - John Mayer on writing Sob Rock.

Sob Rock for Mayer feels so free from adhering to “what's hot” in music that he actually refers to the project as a “shitpost of an album… or more importantly what [he] thought was a shitpost of an album”. He harnessed this carelessness to coax something out of him that he might not have been able to reach otherwise. He feels that for many artists, what they might consider to be their throwaway joke tracks are actually where you’ll find the unique and unexpected. For Mayer, who has been a player for over 20 years in the industry, he's only interested in sticking around if he can “put new paint colors down on the canvas” instead of repeatedly using the same palette. 


“Why You No Love Me”, according to Mayer, is definitely not the joke of a song that the media has received it as. While the lyrical choices have perhaps limited the success of this particular song, it stays true to the heart of Sob Rock. With seven Grammys, 17 million album sales, and an estimated net worth of 70 million USD, it's safe to say he is freely able to make those decisions in service of his wider creative vision at this point in his career. I think it's okay to laugh at it, it's a funny song. It also cuts somehow so deep, which is so classically Mayer.