Meteorite literally means 'meteorite'. It's a powerful and dramatic word that isn't commonly found in everyday song lyrics.
In this song, Will uses it to create a striking metaphor for the intensity of a gaze: "Il tuo sguardo per me è come un meteorite / Nel senso che se cade su di me mi uccide" (Your gaze for me is like a meteorite / In the sense that if it falls on me, it kills me). This vivid image conveys the overwhelming and almost destructive power of love, making it a truly memorable word.
“Estate” isn’t your usual beach-party bop; it’s a roller-coaster confession set under a blinding Mediterranean sun. Will sings from the eye of a romantic storm: he’s nursing bruises both literal and emotional, speeding down highways with a bottle in hand, and scribbling verses that wobble between bravado and vulnerability. The chorus flips the classic summer cliché—Sì c'è l'estate, ma non ci sei tu—reminding us that all the sunshine in the world can’t thaw a heart gone icy when the one you love is missing. Rapid-fire images of trains without destinations, meteor-shower gazes, and “criminal” love paint a picture of a guy who can’t decide whether to run away or hold on tighter, so he does both at once.
Musically bright yet lyrically raw, the song captures the messy aftermath of a breakup when every ray of light actually stings. Will admits he might lose everything—his calm, his way, even himself—but he clings to the only salve he knows: music. By the end, the repeated yeah, yeah, yeah feels less like a carefree chant and more like a mantra to survive another scorched day. “Estate” is summer heartbreak in HD: fiery, chaotic, and impossible to look away from.