"So I’ll sing you a song, I’ll write you a verse, and I’ll tell you I love you till you’re tired of words"
About this Quote
The subtext is complicated tenderness: I don’t know how to fix what hurts you or protect what’s fragile between us, but I can keep making meaning out loud. There’s comfort in that, and also a quiet anxiety. Being “tired of words” hints at the moment when the charm wears thin, when the poetic barrage starts to feel like noise, or like a substitute for action. Bryan is admitting that he might overtalk his feelings, or that his job incentivizes him to turn intimacy into content.
Context matters because Bryan’s appeal is built on plainspoken intensity and the myth of the unfiltered troubadour. He writes like someone texting from a truck stop at midnight: direct, earnest, slightly bruised. The line taps into a modern romantic paradox: we crave raw confession, but we’re hyper-aware of how easily confession becomes performance. It works because it doesn’t resolve that tension; it leans into it, promising love in the only way he knows, while confessing the limits of that method in the same breath.
Quote Details
| Topic | I Love You |
|---|---|
| Source | Song: "Condemned" (2020), from the album Elisabeth |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Bryan, Zach. (2026, January 26). So I’ll sing you a song, I’ll write you a verse, and I’ll tell you I love you till you’re tired of words. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/so-ill-sing-you-a-song-ill-write-you-a-verse-and-184423/
Chicago Style
Bryan, Zach. "So I’ll sing you a song, I’ll write you a verse, and I’ll tell you I love you till you’re tired of words." FixQuotes. January 26, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/so-ill-sing-you-a-song-ill-write-you-a-verse-and-184423/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"So I’ll sing you a song, I’ll write you a verse, and I’ll tell you I love you till you’re tired of words." FixQuotes, 26 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/so-ill-sing-you-a-song-ill-write-you-a-verse-and-184423/. Accessed 5 Feb. 2026.










