5 Seconds Of Summer - The Feeling Of Falling Up... — Trending & Top-Rated

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5 Seconds Of Summer - The Feeling Of Falling Up... — Trending & Top-Rated

"It’s weird, isn't it?" Calum’s voice drifted out from the hotel suite, accompanied by the faint, unplugged rhythmic thrum of his bass. "The higher we get, the more it feels like we’re just... drifting off the map."

Michael joined Luke at the railing, flipping a coin into the abyss of the city below. "It’s not flying," Michael muttered, a tired but sharp grin cutting through his exhaustion. "And it’s not exactly crashing either."

The title itself is an oxymoron. In physics, falling is a downward trajectory governed by gravity. Falling upwards is an impossibility—a paradox. Yet, emotionally, it is the most accurate description of modern anxiety. 5 Seconds of Summer - The Feeling of Falling Up...

Here, Hemmings uses the metaphor brilliantly. From a height, you cannot see the individual pieces of broken tile (your past failures, abandoned friendships, lost privacy). You only see the pretty pattern. But you know the cracks are there.

The Feeling of Falling Upwards , a 50-minute documentary directed by the band’s own Michael Clifford alongside Andy DeLuca, is not a traditional "making of" feature. It’s a confessional booth. It’s a therapy session. It’s a scrapbook of anxiety, triumph, and the strange vertigo of achieving everything you dreamed of, only to realize you’re not sure who you are anymore. "It’s weird, isn't it

The title itself is a paradox. Falling upwards suggests a contradiction—a descent that looks like ascent. For 5SOS, that feeling is deeply familiar.

Sierra Deaton is the primary featured artist on the album The Feeling of Falling Upwards – Live from The Royal Albert Hall . "It’s not flying," Michael muttered, a tired but

The song is built on a deceptive structure. It begins deceptively gentle—a clean guitar arpeggio, Luke Hemmings’s breathy lower register. You feel grounded. But as the song progresses, the production becomes claustrophobic.