The 2010 title track from his debut solo album pushes forward with a simple, insistent question.
There's a quiet confidence in how little the lyric explains.
It doesn't sell you on what 'solar' means or why you should be ready.
The 2010 title track from his debut solo album pushes forward with a simple, insistent question.
The 2010 title track from his debut solo album pushes forward with a simple, insistent question.
There's a quiet confidence in how little the lyric explains.
It doesn't sell you on what 'solar' means or why you should be ready.
The 2010 title track from his debut solo album pushes forward with a simple, insistent question.
Are you ready for solar?
There's a quiet confidence in how little the lyric explains. It doesn't sell you on what 'solar' means or why you should be ready. It just assumes you already know, or that you'll find out when it happens. That's the move of someone who's done waiting in the wings.
The whole thing hangs on that question, 'Are you ready for solar?' It's not really asking for permission, it's more like a countdown, a final check before the lights come up. The repetition of 'yeah' afterward feels less like an answer and more like the engine turning over, the crowd noise before the show starts.
Everything in the song points to this moment. It's the switch being flipped, the curtain going up. You either are or you aren't, but the show's starting anyway.
The way 'yeah' stacks up at the end, almost like a chant building itself. It's all forward motion.
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The lyric stays readable and compact here; the note and related paths sit nearby so you do not lose the song while looking for context.
I think it's time
To let the sun shine
Just gotta a question for ya?ll:
Are you ready for solar?
Say, are you ready for solar?
Oh, oh...
Now the stars sound off for this baby
It?s about that time to rise
We're looking forward,
So just leave it behind
So say yeah,
You know you gotta say yeah
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah...
Let's go.
The 2010 title track from his debut solo album pushes forward with a simple, insistent question. There's a quiet confidence in how little the lyric explains. It doesn't sell you on what 'solar' means or why you should be ready.
TaeYang performs "Solar", and this lyric page sits inside the TaeYang catalog on LyroVerse.
Yes. The page carries the LyroVerse editor's note "TaeYang's Solar asks if you're ready", followed by the full lyric and related songs.
Yes. The related section below points to Intro (RISE) and Ride with a short reason for opening each page next.
Use the artist link near the top of the page or the related paths section below to keep moving through TaeYang's lyric pages.
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