Crazier Than You Lyrics – Addams Family, The
Crazier Than You Lyrics
thought we were one.
Life, less than perfect
finally begun.
But, now i wonder
are we undone?
i wanna treasure you in death as well as life
I wanna cut you with my love and with my knife
but can i live as your tormentor and your wife
when i am crazier than you
i'm crazier than you
and nothing up til now has proved me wrong
i'm crazier than you
that's just the overview
so get on board or simply move along
I'm not impulsive
(and yet i truly love you)
I'm not deranged
(i'd never ask that of you)
but in this moment
I feel I've changed.
I wanna climb Mt. Everest go to Mozambique
i wanna be impulsive want to be unique
can you believe i mean it when you hear me shriek
I'm crazier than you
I'm crazier than you
and now i'll prove to you exactly how
i'm crazier than you
I'll do what you can do
from here on in i give my solemn vow
pluck the arrow from its quiver,
hold it in your hand be brave.
Pierce the apple not the liver
or we're dancing on my grave.
Place it in the bow and steady,
Can't you shoot that thing already!
I wanna demonstrate that fear is my ideal
(girl believe me fear is your ideal)
Cause in the moment that you're frightened life is real
(then my life must be real real!)
and in a flash when i release and seal the deal
I'm crazier than you
I'm crazier than you
and nothing hurts me when i hear you say
I'm crazier than you
psychotically into
and that is all i need to face the day
i'm crazier than you
i'm crazier than you
and live or die i'll let you have control
I'm crazier than you
so say you love me too
from here on in you're singing to my soul
my soul!
Song Overview

“Crazier Than You” is the quick-draw love duet from Andrew Lippa’s Broadway score for The Addams Family, a whip-smart showdown where Wednesday and Lucas try to out-dare each other until trust finally lands the shot. The lyrics flirt with danger while the arrangement snaps like a trap door. It’s playful, morbid, breathless - and it works because Lippa writes pop-forward hooks that still feel like musical-theatre storytelling.
Review & Highlights

This is the turning point where Wednesday and Lucas decide what kind of pair they’ll be. The lyrics ping-pong between vows and dares, and Andrew Lippa keeps the groove clipped and bright so every joke lands. I hear a comic waltz of nerves and bravado under the pop sheen, which lets the bit with the crossbow feel reckless and somehow romantic. You get storytelling first, fireworks second - that’s why fans replay it and memorize every lyric.
Personal take: it’s a two-minute sprint that still sneaks in character work. Wednesday wants proof. Lucas wants to be brave. The lyric turns that tension into rhythm - setup, punch, kiss. Twice in one song you get the wordplay and the who-are-we-now answer.
Key takeaways: it’s the Act II confidence flip, a duet that tests trust in real time, and a showcase for tight ensemble interjections that crank the comedy without derailing the romance.
Verse 1
Wednesday starts in doubt, poking at the line between love and torment. The music snaps to attention with short phrases and sly intervals - you can almost hear the eyebrow raise between bars.
Chorus
“I’m crazier than you” becomes the dare and the thesis. Each repeat stacks confidence, while the accompaniment rides steady eighths like a held breath.
Exchange/Bridge
The back-and-forth is the charm - quick switches, mock threats, and the famous apple gambit. Orchestration stays nimble: guitar-piano pulses, winds for zingers, then a brass wink at the release.
Final Build
By the last refrain, the joke turns sincere. The lyric concedes control while the harmony brightens, landing on a pop-clean button that still sounds Broadway.
Song Meaning and Annotations

The message is simple: love without nerve is costume play. Wednesday’s barbed vows push Lucas to meet her at her level - not macabre for macabre’s sake, but honest about fear. The duet’s pop-swing feel keeps the blade shiny, never heavy.
“Both Wednesday and Lucas sing this line.”
That’s the point - it’s not one winning over the other; it’s two people matching danger with devotion in unison.
The mood shifts from wary to wired. You can hear it in how the lyric shortens its sentences as they commit. The joke about harm carries lore baked into Addams culture.
“To bring back a dead Addams for one night only, you must dance on their grave.”
That lore isn’t just dark flavoring - it frames risk as tradition, so the duet reads as a courtship rite, not a prank.
The line that fans debate in singalongs also reveals the songwriting aim - clean rhyme, fast sense, crisp diction.
“It should be ‘in tune’ instead of ‘into’ (‘psychotically in tune’).”
That tiny correction clarifies the gag: two voices snapping into place, not slipping into chaos. It’s a musical joke about partnership.
Genre-wise, Lippa blends contemporary musical theatre with radio-friendly phrasing - bright tempo, tight scansion, a backbeat that loves consonants. It’s closer to pop-rock vaudeville than patter, and it invites clean, unfussy singing so the punchlines breathe.
The emotional arc starts skeptical, skids into daredevil, then resolves on trust. The turning image - the blindfolded apple shot - works because the music doesn’t swell into syrup; it clicks, releases, and lands.
Cultural touchpoint: the Addams brand of romance has always mixed elegance with morbidity. Here, those aesthetics get a millennial polish - shorter hooks, quippier lines, and a self-aware wink that plays to YouTube rewatch culture.

Message
Trust is an action, not a promise. The lyric puts that on stage - literally on someone’s head - and then lets harmony seal it.
Emotional tone
Flirty, prickly, then earnest. The comedy never undercuts sincerity; it sneaks it in.
Production
Arranged for a Broadway pit with brisk rhythm section, reeds for color, and brassy tags. Studio polish on the cast album keeps the consonants crisp so every lyric joke scores.
Instrumentation
Piano, guitar, bass, drums at the core; reeds and brass punchlines; strings sparingly for glide into the final vow.
Key phrases and idioms
“Crazier than you” flips the usual love-song humility. It’s not I’ll change for you; it’s I’ll meet you at your edge.
Metaphors and symbols
The apple trick is a trust fall with aim. The blindfold isn’t danger - it’s consent.
Creation history
Andrew Lippa wrote music and lyrics for The Addams Family, which opened on Broadway in April 2010 and recorded its cast album that spring. “Crazier Than You” appears as track 15 on the Decca Broadway release.
Key Facts
- Artist: Andrew Lippa
- Featured: Wesley Taylor & Krysta Rodriguez
- Composer: Andrew Lippa
- Lyricist: Andrew Lippa
- Producer: Andrew Lippa
- Release Date: June 8, 2010
- Genre: Musical theatre - pop-inflected duet
- Instruments: piano, guitar, bass, drums, reeds, brass, limited strings
- Label: Decca Broadway
- Mood: daring, flirtatious, high-spirited
- Length: 2:51
- Track #: 15
- Language: English
- Album: The Addams Family - Original Broadway Cast Recording
- Music style: uptempo theatre-pop with comic call-and-response
- Poetic meter: mostly duple with clipped internal rhyme
- © Copyrights: 2010 Decca Label Group
Questions and Answers
- Who produced “Crazier Than You”?
- Andrew Lippa produced the original Broadway cast recording track.
- When was the song released?
- It arrived with the cast album on June 8, 2010.
- Who sings on the recording?
- Krysta Rodriguez and Wesley Taylor perform Wednesday and Lucas on the track.
- Where does it sit in the show?
- Act II - the trust-test duet that pushes the couple from nerves to commitment.
- Any notable adaptations or covers?
- Yes - the Brazilian production recorded a Portuguese version titled “Mais Louco Que Você.”
Awards and Chart Positions
The cast album featuring “Crazier Than You” charted on Billboard’s Top Cast Albums, reaching at least no. 4 the week ending June 26, 2010, and appearing again in the top 10 later that summer. While the individual track was not released as a standalone single, the album’s visibility helped the duet become a go-to audition and showcase piece. Internationally, the number traveled with licensed productions, including a Portuguese-language hit in Brazil under the title “Mais Louco Que Você.”
Music video
Addams Family, The Lyrics: Song List
- Addams Family Theme
- Overture
- When You're An Addams
- Pulled
- Where Did We Go Wrong
- One Normal Night
- Morticia
- What If
- Full Disclosure
- Waiting
- Full Disclosure - Part 2
- Just Around The Corner
- The Moon And Me
- Happy/Sad
- Crazier Than You
- Let's Not Talk About Anything Else But Love
- Let's Not Talk About Anything Else But Love (Reprise)
- In The Arms
- Live Before We Die
- Tango De Amor
- Move Toward The Darkness