ORDINARY LYRICS – Alex Warren img 0

ORDINARY LYRICS – A⁠l⁠e⁠x W⁠a⁠r⁠r⁠e⁠n

Song: ORDINARY

Artist: Alex Warren

[Verse 1]

They say, "The holy water's watered down
And this town's lost its faith
Our colors will fade eventually"
So if our time is runnin' out
Day after day
We'll make the mundane our masterpiece

[Pre-Chorus]

Oh my, my
Oh my, my love
I take one look at you

[Chorus]

You're takin' me out of the ordinary
I want you layin' me down 'til we're dead and buried
On the edge of your knife, stayin' drunk on your vine
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found
Somethin' so out of the ordinary
You got me kissin' the ground of your sanctuary
Shatter me with your touch, oh Lord, return me to dust
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found

[Verse 2]

Hopeless hallelujah
On this side of Heaven's gate
Oh, my life, how do ya
Breathe and take my breath away?
At your altar, I will pray
You're the sculptor, I'm the clay
Oh my, my

[Chorus]

You're takin' me out of the ordinary
I want you layin' me down 'til we're dead and buried
On the edge of your knife, stayin' drunk on your vine
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found
Somethin' so out (out) of the ordinary (ordinary)
You got me kissin' the ground (ground) of your sanctuary (sanctuary)
Shatter me with your touch, oh Lord, return me to dust
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found

[Bridge]

Somethin' so heavenly, higher than ecstasy
Whenever you're next to me, oh my, my
World was in black and white until I saw your light
I thought you had to die to find

[Chorus]

Somethin' so out of the ordinary
I want you layin' me down 'til we're dead and buried
On the edge of your knife, stayin' drunk on your vine
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found
Somethin' so out (out) of the ordinary
You got me kissin' the ground (ground) of your sanctuary (sanctuary)
Shatter me with your touch, oh Lord, return me to dust
The angels up in the clouds are jealous, knowin' we found


Song Overview

 Screenshot from Ordinary lyrics video by Alex Warren
Alex Warren is singing the 'Ordinary' lyrics in the music video.

Song Credits

  • Producer: Adam Yaron
  • Writers: Adam Yaron, Alex Warren, CAL, Mags Duval
  • Release Date: 2025-02-07
  • Album: You’ll Be Alright, Kid (Chapter 2)
  • Genre: Pop, Folk Pop, Christian, Stomp and Holler
  • Label: Atlantic Records
  • Language: English
  • Phonographic Copyright: ℗ Atlantic Records
  • Copyright: © Atlantic Records

Song Meaning and Annotations

Alex Warren performing song Ordinary
Performance in the music video.

"They say, 'The holy water's watered down / And this town's lost its faith'"

It strikes like a hymn gone hoarse—disillusionment in full bloom. Whether spiritual or emotional, belief has cracked, faded, (a hush falls) dissolved into something less pure.

“Holy water” isn’t just diluted—it’s been drained of magic. Hope, meaning, wonder—all thinned out, just enough to feel the loss but not enough to quench the thirst.

A poetic surrender to entropy. (beat) Nothing holds forever—not fire, not youth, not even love untouched. Time doesn’t ask permission before it chisels us down.

But amid the erosion, a vow—to craft beauty from the ordinary. What once felt dull pulses with light, because it’s shared. The mundane turns radiant in the presence of love.

One glance—just that—and awe pours in. Reverence without ritual. A sacred moment without scripture.

This is the engine of the song: Love, the alchemist. It turns the gray into gold, reshaping reality with every heartbeat.

There’s a flicker of the morbid—romance steeped in mortality. Devotion till the end, a soft echo of eternity inside something so human.

Then, the rush. A sharp sweetness.

"Somethin' so heavenly, higher than ecstasy / Whenever you're next to me"

It’s biblical, intoxicating—love like wine poured into cracked clay. Angels look down, envious. (pause for breath) Because this? This is worship disguised as affection.

The beloved becomes a cathedral, a place of surrender. The narrator doesn’t just adore—they kneel.

Dust to dust, heart to dust—and still, they sing.

"Hallelujah"—in heartbreak.
A paradox wrapped in reverence. Joy and ruin, dancing in the same breath.

They haven’t stepped through Heaven’s gate, but they’ve found the next best thing. Love that feels like grace, offered not in death—but in life.

Ordinary by Alex Warren doesn’t just flirt with devotion—it marries it at a candlelit altar in the chapel of vulnerability. It’s a modern hymn that trades stained glass for bedroom windows, and holy books for love notes.

Verse 1

They say, "The holy water's watered down / And this town's lost its faith"

Right out the gate, Warren launches into existential terrain. Disillusionment, societal decay, spiritual drought—he’s not pulling punches. The line drips with metaphor, implying that sanctity and meaning have been diluted, not unlike a glass of wine left in the rain. Yet amidst this dim outlook, a spark:

We'll make the mundane our masterpiece

This is where it flips. The speaker rejects nihilism by clinging to love. If the world is gray, then their relationship is the brushstroke that brings back color.

Chorus

You're takin' me out of the ordinary

Here lies the song’s thesis. In a drab, disenchanted world, his partner is a miracle—more burning bush than bouquet. The line "drunk on your vine" echoes biblical allegory, invoking divine intoxication, spiritual fervor, and romance all tangled into one vine-wrapped moment.

Verse 2

Hopeless hallelujah / On this side of Heaven's gate

This oxymoron captures the sacredness of their love despite existential uncertainty. The lover is framed as divine, a sculptor molding him into someone new. Religious references are consistent, but always twisted into something earthly, visceral.

Bridge

World was in black and white until I saw your light

We’ve seen this sentiment before, but Warren manages to sell it like it’s newly invented. The imagery feels cinematic—think Dorothy stepping into Oz. The grayscale life shifts to technicolor, with the beloved as the trigger.

The instrumentation—a swell of cinematic pop with folk undertones—elevates the drama. It feels spiritual without being preachy, romantic without falling into sap. The track is soaked in symbolism but wrapped in the language of devotion that’s tender, not saccharine.

Similar Songs

Thumbnail from Ordinary lyric video by Alex Warren
A screenshot from the 'Ordinary' music video.
  1. “Heaven” by Niall Horan – Both songs channel a form of spiritual awe directed at a romantic partner. While Horan leans more into soft rock territory, the thematic undertow is similar: the divine is not above, but beside you. Horan’s delivery is smoother, while Warren’s is raw and reverent.
  2. “You Say” by Lauren Daigle – Though more overtly Christian, Daigle’s ballad also battles inner doubt and finds resolution through another’s faith and love. “Ordinary” feels like its secular cousin, using similar spiritual language to highlight romantic healing.
  3. “From the Dining Table” by Harry Styles – A slower tempo, but the sense of yearning, loneliness, and redemption through human connection mirrors Warren’s themes. Where Styles is more resigned, Warren lifts us up with the idea that love makes the banal sacred.

Questions and Answers

Scene from Ordinary track by Alex Warren
Visual effects scene from 'Ordinary'.
What is the central message of "Ordinary" by Alex Warren?
It's about discovering divinity in human love—how someone can rescue you from numbness and turn ordinary life into something sacred and astonishing.
Who produced the track?
Adam Yaron, who co-wrote and produced the track, brought a cinematic, textured soundscape that supports the lyrical depth.
How does the song incorporate religious imagery?
From references to "holy water" to "Heaven’s gate" and being "returned to dust", the lyrics borrow heavily from Christian iconography to elevate love to a spiritual experience.
What genre is the song?
A hybrid of Pop, Folk Pop, Christian, and a pinch of Stomp and Holler—imagine a soulful sermon sung at a barn wedding with glowing lanterns overhead.
Why do the angels appear in the chorus?
The angels act as metaphors for divine witnesses—celestial beings envious of the kind of intimacy and wonder the speaker has found. A humble brag wrapped in poetry.

Awards and Chart Positions

  • Debuted at #61 on the Billboard Hot 100 (February 22, 2025)
  • Peaked at #2 on the Billboard Hot 100 (May 10, 2025)
  • Performed live at the 2025 American Music Awards

Fan and Media Reactions

"This song makes me feel like I'm falling in love for the first time again." – YouTube user
"Why does this sound like a wedding vow wrapped in a pop song?" – Commenter
"Ordinary?? There’s nothing ordinary about this. It’s sacred." – Top liked comment
"Every line feels like it was pulled out of a prayer and whispered into someone’s neck." – Fan review
"I didn’t expect to cry at 2 a.m. on a Thursday but here we are." – Listener on Reddit
"This track cements Alex Warren as more than a viral artist—he’s building something profound." – PopCrate Magazine
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