Butterflies

Album: Icon (2026)
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Songfacts®:

  • There are butterflies, and then there are Butterflies. The former flutter politely about one's garden like something from a nature documentary. The latter - at least in the hands of Brent Faiyaz - arrive in formation, occupy the ribcage, and refuse to pay rent.
  • "Butterflies" is a two-part love song. Part I opens in a state of romantic turbulence. Faiyaz is diving in quickly, perhaps recklessly, but insists the feelings are real. This is not the gentle flutter promised by pop folklore (see also: Michael Jackson's "Butterflies," where love glides in on silk). Here, the sensation is closer to a chest clamp than a meadow. He wants clarity, reassurance, confirmation, and he wants it yesterday. The anxiety of infatuation is laid bare, the sort that makes you check your phone as if it's a life-support machine.
  • Then comes Part II, and with it, a shift in altitude. The song pivots from self-focused nerves to outward-facing admiration. The emotional lens widens. Instead of obsessing over how he feels, Faiyaz centers on the woman: her resilience, her worth, her need for care. The closing mantra, "For what it's worth, girl, you inspire me," reframes the entire exercise. What began as a diary entry about his own romantic jitters becomes a tribute. It's less Why don't you text me back? and more I hope the world treats you gently.
  • Hitmaking producer Benny Blanco co-wrote and co-produced the track alongside Dpat, 1stfrom92 and Legion. Blanco, whose résumé includes collaborations with Katy Perry, Rihanna, Justin Bieber, The Weeknd and Selena Gomez, also worked with Faiyaz on "Other Side."
  • Faiyaz recorded "Butterflies" for his third album, Icon, and while it isn't tied to a specific named relationship, it fits into the album's broader take on love and vulnerability. Sequenced right after "Have To" and before "Other Side," the song forms the emotional middle child of a three-song arc. "Have To" is obsessive long-distance yearning; "Butterflies" captures anxious new love; "Other Side" settles into steadier devotion. It's practically a relationship life cycle set to R&B.

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