Ava Max Business Is Business Rough Lyrics Abrac
Ava Max Business Is Business Rough Lyrics Abrac
“Business is business / So take your forgiveness and stick it / I don’t got feelings to hurt / You get what you deserve / Business is business / So don’t make it personal, listen / I’m not your enemy, no / But you gotta go”
The “stick it” (implied: somewhere unpleasant) is the roughest moment in the chorus. It’s vulgar without being explicit. The line “I don’t got feelings to hurt” is a lie she’s telling herself—or a wall she’s built—but delivered with such conviction it feels like armor.
“Don’t you text me ‘happy birthday’ / Don’t you show up at my show / I deleted all your pictures / That was three years ago”
These are the “rough” details fans love. The specificity (“three years ago”) shows she’s been over it for a while. The command “Don’t you” is aggressive, not sad. ava max business is business rough lyrics abrac
For those who want the raw text of the harshest section, here it is verbatim (from the official recording):
“Business is business, so take your forgiveness and stick it
I don’t got feelings to hurt
You get what you deserve
Business is business, so don’t make it personal, listen
Abracadabra, you’re gone just like that
Hocus pocus, now you’re out of focus”
That “stick it” and the abrupt “you’re gone” are the rough gems fans keep quoting. “Business is business / So take your forgiveness
"Business Is Business" is one of Ava Max's tracks. For the most accurate and up-to-date information on the song, including its lyrics, I recommend checking a reliable lyrics website or Ava Max's official discography.
Search engines sometimes combine terms. “Abrac” could be a fragment of another song’s lyric from Diamonds & Dancefloors, such as:
Alternatively, it might be a typo for “abra” (as in “abrasive”) — which fits the “rough” description perfectly. The “stick it” (implied: somewhere unpleasant) is the
“Business is Business” is a breakup song with zero nostalgia. There’s no crying, no pleading. Instead, Ava adopts the persona of a corporate-style executioner. The title itself is a cold, transactional phrase used to justify firing someone or ending a partnership without hard feelings—except here, there are feelings, and they’re being deliberately crushed.
The song’s central theme: I’m cutting you off for profit (my emotional profit). Don’t take it personally. It’s just business.
Musically, the track is driven by a pulsating 80s-inspired bassline, staccato synths, and Ava’s signature soaring chorus. But lyrically, it’s brutal.