Temitayo is a 27-year-old working in e-commerce. Temitayo was a 27-year-old working in e-commerce. Then Beyoncé dropped “Break My Soul,” from Renaissance, her upcoming seventh studio album. “I had planned to wait until the end of the month, but then I heard ‘Break My Soul’ and it really gave me the push to send that resignation mail out,” Temitayo tells Glamour. “I was really burnt out from work stress and they weren’t even paying enough.
Beyoncé releasing that song really reminded me of who the fuck I am.” This content can also be viewed on the site it from.Jokes like “Beyoncé told me to quit my job so I'm giving notice right now” have been since more or less the second the song dropped.
The first verse starts with Beyoncé's unmistakable warm, glossy voice belting, “Now, I just fell in love / And I just quit my job.” She goes on: I'm gonna find new drive, damn, they work me so damn hardWork by nineThen off past fiveAnd they work my nerves, that's why I cannot sleep at nightBig Freedia, the same rapper sampled on joins in, chanting, “Release ya anger, release ya mind / Release ya job / Release the time.” “Break My Soul” is a song that will raise the temperature on infinite dance floors and wear out the hardware on devices as fingers scramble to press repeat.
Directors will fight over who gets to use it in inspirational movie montages. An untold number of cycling classes will tone their glutes to its beat.
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