Album: Big Ole Album Vol. 1 (2025)
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • LeBron James' professional basketball career began when he was selected by the Cleveland Cavaliers with the first overall pick of the 2003 NBA draft. In 2025 he was still bounding down the court, dispatching defenders half his age, generally making a mockery of time itself.

    This is the energy A Day to Remember channeled into their pop-punk battle cry "LeBron," recorded for their 2025 album Big Ole Album Vol. 1. The seasoned band, veterans of the scene long enough to have seen multiple waves of trends come and go, found themselves in a position not unlike King James: still standing, still swinging, and still hearing people mutter that surely their best days are behind them. To which they responded, musically speaking, by flipping the proverbial bird.
  • Bring home another dub for my city and run
    Like it's 2016, and I'm LeBron
    How many rings I need 'fore you'll say I'm the one?
    The one, the one, woo


    For those not well-versed in sports history (or the finer points of LeBron lore), 2016 was the year he led the Cleveland Cavaliers to their first-ever NBA Championship, a moment of triumph that involved vanquishing the mighty Golden State Warriors and silencing a great many doubters in the process.
  • The song was born from a YouTube comment on another ADTR track, "Miracle."

    "It is a miracle that they wrote another good song," someone quipped. Their frontman, Jeremy McKinnon, did not let this slide. "I took that personally!" he told NME. "Why are you either the best or the absolute worst? There is never an in-between – people either love you or hate you in the moment."

    McKinnon feels a kindred spirit in LeBron, whose greatness is often overshadowed by endless, circular debates about whether he is, in fact, the greatest of all time. "People obviously respect him," McKinnon mused, "but more than anything, there's this negative discourse around his career when he has done so many amazing things."

    And thus, a song was birthed - not just as a declaration of defiance but as a broader commentary on the exhausting nature of public opinion.
  • Sonically, the track is classic ADTR: punchy pop-punk rhythms, crunchy breakdowns, and production from WZRD BLD, Zakk Cervini, and McKinnon, all conspiring to keep the band's signature sound alive and well. In short, it's a musical slam dunk - because if LeBron James has taught us anything, it's that some things, and some people, refuse to fade away.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

Kristian Bush of Sugarland

Kristian Bush of SugarlandSongwriter Interviews

Kristian talks songwriting technique, like how the chorus should redefine the story, and how to write a song backwards.

Christmas Songs

Christmas SongsFact or Fiction

Rudolf, Bob Dylan and the Singing Dogs all show up in this Fact or Fiction for seasonal favorites.

Alan Merrill of The Arrows

Alan Merrill of The ArrowsSongwriter Interviews

In her days with The Runaways, Joan Jett saw The Arrows perform "I Love Rock And Roll," which Alan Merrill co-wrote - that story and much more from this glam rock pioneer.

Gary Numan

Gary NumanSongwriter Interviews

An Electronic music pioneer with Asperger's Syndrome. This could be interesting.

The Fratellis

The FratellisSongwriter Interviews

Jon Fratelli talks about the band's third album, and the five-year break leading up to it.

Director Wes Edwards ("Drunk on a Plane")

Director Wes Edwards ("Drunk on a Plane")Song Writing

Wes Edwards takes us behind the scenes of videos he shot for Jason Aldean, Dierks Bentley and Chase Bryant. The train was real - the airplane was not.