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Never Gonna Not Dance Again could have been bigger

May 10, 2026 Words on the page

This morning, Apple Music surfaced a song I hadn’t thought about in years: Pink’s “Never Gonna Not Dance Again,” written by Pink (Alecia Moore), Shellback and Max Martin. The song was released in 2022 and reached No. 99 on the US Billboard Hot 100.

I like the song! I think the song could have been a bigger hit. It has a helluva hook:

never gonna not dance musical notation, version 1

The stop-start phrasing on the descent gives it a surprising staggered rhythm, with little nooks and handholds. Then it jumps back up for the landing, with “dance” taking the stress. That’s good prosody.

When the hook repeats for the third time, we simplify down to sixteenth notes. The different texture keeps it feeling fresh.

never gonna not dance musical notation, version 2

(Both snippets from the official sheet music.)

Lyrically, the double negative takes a beat to parse. Does “never gonna not” mean she is or isn’t gonna dance? It’s a tiny puzzle for your brain to unscramble. The final “again” is a nice surprise that makes you re-parse the phrase.

Altogether, I think it’s a terrific hook. I just wonder if it could be better supported by the song around it.

“I’m never gonna not dance again” suggests that at one point the singer stopped dancing — and she now realizes that was a mistake. With this lyric, she’s making a promise to keep dancing.

This idea feels like the payoff to a setup that the song never delivers. Instead, the opening verse describes a hypothetical bad situation:

If someone told me that the world would end tonight
You could take all that I got, for once I wouldn’t start a fight
You could have my liquor, take my dinner, take my fun
My birthday cake, my soul, my dog, take everything I love

There’s nothing wrong with this verse. It’s a good setup for the idea of “despite these bad things, I’m choosing joy.” That’s an attitude, a swagger, completely in keeping with Pink’s persona.

But the hook is specifically “I’m never gonna not dance again.” To get there, one can imagine lyrics about the before-times, when she was living in her head, worrying and holding back. Maybe insecurity had stopped her. The hook is her vow to stop doing that, and instead return to her earlier enthusiasm for dancing and having fun.

Once the hook-chorus has done its job, we can stay in the present. The existing verses serve us well, including:

I want my life to be a Whitney Houston song (I wanna dance)
I got all good luck and zero fucks, don’t care if I belong

Here the song is specifically referencing Whitney Houston’s 1987 “I Wanna Dance with Somebody,” which feels instructive. That song’s verse does what I’m suggesting:

I’ve been in love and lost my senses
Spinning through the town
Sooner or later, the fever ends
And I wind up feeling down

The singer recognizes a pattern: love burns burns hot, fades, and leaves her feeling lonely. But she knows what she needs:

I need a man who’ll take the chance
On a love that burns hot enough to last
So when the night falls
My lonely heart calls

It’s a setup that lands perfectly on the hook: “I wanna dance with somebody.”

I don’t mean to pretend songwriting is the only reason songs perform well on the charts. But I suspect that if “Never Gonna Not Dance Again” embraced that problem/solution structure, it could have been a bigger hit, or at least found a larger place in the pop songbook.

Of course, writers should write what they want! I don’t know anything about the specific process of crafting this song. It’s entirely possible that the verses came first and the hook arrived later. Pink and her collaborators may have delivered exactly the song they intended.

But as someone who’s written a few songs (and thousands of scenes), had I come upon this hook, I would have gladly rebuilt the scaffolding to support it. It’s just such a great central idea.

The finished song works. I just keep imagining the version that might have worked even better.

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