Talk To You (feat. 54 Ultra) - Single album cover by ANOTR

30-sec preview

2026 · From the album Talk To You (feat. 54 Ultra) - Single

Talk To You (feat. 54 Ultra)

by ANOTR

0 Views
03:11 Runtime

The reading

A house-floor invitation that treats the dancefloor as a private elsewhere, where attraction and rhythm do the talking

02 · Interpretation

ANOTR's 'Talk To You': A Dancefloor Invitation Disguised as a Love Song

E Editorial Desk

ANOTR has built a reputation in the late 2010s and 2020s house scene for tracks that prize groove and atmosphere over narrative, and "Talk To You," released in March 2026 with vocalist 54 Ultra, sits squarely in that lane. It is a dance record first and a love song second, but the two functions are not separable: the song's argument is that being talked to, being shown love, and being made to move are the same event.

The lyric is built from two short modules that repeat. The first is an offer of elevation: the speaker wants to take the listener "higher" so they can "show you love." The second is a more direct address: "Let me talk to you / Show you what love can do / I wanna see you move." Between them sits a single image that does most of the song's emotional work, a "place with fire" that is "for both of us." Everything else orbits that image.

The fire as shared space

House and dance lyrics often locate desire somewhere offstage, a club, a night, a room. ANOTR and 54 Ultra take that convention and compress it. The fire here is not destruction; it is a venue. The line "Let's set the world on fire" could be read as the standard pop hyperbole of young infatuation, but the follow-up, "you can't get enough," and the parenthetical "you got me burning up," pull it back toward something more bodily. Heat is the medium of contact. The two people are not burning the world down so much as agreeing to stand inside the same flame.

The pre-chorus or bridge section, "Let me talk to you / Show you what love can do," reframes the title. "Talk" in this song is not conversation. It is whatever the music itself is doing, the bass, the rhythm, the build. When the singer says "I wanna see you move," the request is for a response that bypasses language entirely. "I know you can feel it too" closes that loop: the proof of communication is physical, not verbal.

Why the repetition works

A reader looking at the lyric sheet alone might find it thin. The same six lines come around two and three times, and the closing stretch reduces the whole song to a single phrase, "you got me burning up," repeated. But repetition is the point in this kind of production. In a club context, the lyric is not a poem to be read but a refrain to lock the listener into the track's loop. Each return of "Let me take you higher" works as a rebuilding cue, an invitation extended again at a new energy level. The minimalism is functional, not lazy.

54 Ultra's vocal performance, working against ANOTR's production, sells the sincerity that the words on the page only sketch. The lyric leaves room for delivery to carry the meaning, and that is a deliberate choice in a genre where the voice is treated as one more instrument in the mix.

Why it lands

Dance music's most durable tracks tend to be the ones that articulate, however simply, a fantasy of shared transcendence. "Talk To You" does not try to do more than that. Its appeal is in how cleanly it states the offer: come with me, this place is for us both, you can feel it, so move. Whether the song endures past its release cycle will depend on how the production ages, but the lyric does exactly what it needs to. It gives the dancer a reason to stay on the floor and a single image, the shared fire, to hold onto when the drop comes.

03 · Lyrics

"Talk To You (feat. 54 Ultra)"

Let me take you higher

So I can show you love

It's a place with fire

But it's for both of us

Let's set the world on fire

Ooh, you can't get enough

(You got me burning up)

Let me take you higher

So I can show you love

It's a place with fire

But it's for both of us

Let's set the world on fire

Ooh, you can't get enough

(You got me burning up)

Let me take you higher

Let me talk to you

Show you what love can do

I wanna see you move

I know you can feel it too

Let me talk to you

Show you what love can do

I wanna see you move

I know you can feel it too

Let me talk to you

Show you what love can do

I wanna see you move

Let me take you higher

So I can show you love

It's a place with fire

But it's for both of us

Let's set the world on fire

Ooh, you can't get enough

(You got me burning up)

Let me take you higher

So I can show you love

It's a place with fire

But it's for both of us

Let's set the world on fire

Ooh, you can't get enough

(You got me burning up)

You got me burning up

You got me burning up

Lyrics via Google. Copyright belongs to rights holders.

04 · FAQ

Frequently asked

What does 'Talk To You' by ANOTR actually mean?
The song frames a club encounter as a kind of non-verbal conversation. When the vocalist sings about wanting to talk, the implied medium is the music and the movement it provokes, not literal speech. 'I wanna see you move / I know you can feel it too' makes the exchange physical rather than spoken.
What is the 'place with fire' referenced in the lyrics?
It functions as a metaphor for a shared space of attraction and intensity, most likely the dancefloor itself. The detail that matters is the qualifier 'for both of us,' which turns the fire from something dangerous into something mutual, a venue the two people enter together.
Who is 54 Ultra, the featured artist on 'Talk To You'?
54 Ultra is credited as the featured vocalist on the single. The track leans on that vocal performance to carry the emotional weight of a fairly minimal lyric, which is typical of how Dutch house producers like ANOTR build their tracks around a single guest voice.
Why are the lyrics of 'Talk To You' so repetitive?
Repetition is structural in house music. The two short modules, 'Let me take you higher' and 'Let me talk to you,' work as refrains that anchor the track across its builds and drops. The lyric is designed to loop with the production, not to read as a linear narrative on the page.
How does 'Talk To You' fit into ANOTR's wider catalogue?
ANOTR rose to wider attention with house records that pair propulsive grooves with simple, hook-led vocals, and 'Talk To You' continues that template. The song prioritises atmosphere and a singable refrain over lyrical complexity, which is consistent with the producer's club-first approach.
What does 'you got me burning up' suggest in the song?
The phrase, repeated as the track closes, completes the fire metaphor by locating it in the body. Earlier verses describe the fire as a place; the closing line places the heat inside the speaker. It reads as a confession of physical attraction stripped to its simplest form.
Is 'Talk To You' meant to be a love song or a club track?
It works as both, and the lyric collapses the distinction. The vocabulary of romance, showing love, going higher, is fused with the vocabulary of the dancefloor, moving, feeling it, burning up. The song treats club connection and romantic connection as the same gesture.
0:00 -0:00