Poetic, introspective, and layered, Odile Ohms’ “Don’t Give It Wings” is an alt-pop track infused with punk rock attitude, carrying reflections on the ways internal dialogue can loop and repeat patterns in life.
It lyrically grapples with the idea that while we cannot always stop situations from unfolding, we can change how we respond to them.
Lyrics like “The apple doesn’t fall far unless you run, run, run / Don’t look back at the apple tree / The brilliance of a diamond is from the pressure received / Now do you have your clarity?” reinforce this central motif, evoking tension around familiar existential questions.
Do we become our parents? Do the patterns and traumas of adolescence echo into adulthood, repeating themselves in different forms?
While those questions are deeply personal and ultimately only you can answer them, the song captures an ongoing internal monologue rooted in the desire to escape family dynamics in order to reclaim autonomy and control over one’s life. It also reflects on the way we often equate constant hard work with self-shaping, while in reality, it can become another form of avoidance, a way of running from the problem rather than confronting it directly.
Sonically, Ohms’ vocals are echoed and processed in a way that makes them feel like another instrument, layered into the gritty, whirling rock textures of the driving guitars and grunge-leaning beat.
Stylistically, it’s clear that Ohms has carved out a lane of her own, one that isn’t solely driven by melody or lyrics, but by music where lyrics, instrumentation, and melody fuse together to evoke a sense of reckoning with oneself in the search for answers.