A minimalist piano-ballad built around the weight of an ordinary Thursday morning call — tomatoes from the garden, a pasta recipe, a routine goodbye — and what it costs to hear it again afterward.
He called on a Thursday morning at 7:52. He had tomatoes from the garden. He wanted a pasta recipe. He said good morning, asked how the week was going, said love you, said bye. It was an ordinary call — the kind you mean to return later, when you have a minute.
This song lives in that later. The pasta is still on the shelf. You can't make it because it was his idea, and you can't throw it away for the same reason. The tomatoes come back every year whether you plant them or not. The recipe exists now — you finally wrote it down — but there's no one to send it to.
"Seven Fifty-Two" doesn't try to explain what happened or give the grief a shape it doesn't have. It just holds the voicemail up to the light: the ask was so small, the morning was so early, and none of it knew what the afternoon would do.
[Verse 1]
Seven fifty-two on a Thursday
You called to say good morning, nothing more
You had tomatoes on the counter
You were wondering what I did with yours
Said send me that recipe sometime
Like we had a thousand somedays left
I didn't call you back till evening
And evening turned to a different kind of rest
[Chorus]
I keep the pasta on the shelf now
I can't make it, can't throw it away
Your voice still on my phone at seven fifty-two
Saying hey, saying love you, saying have a good day
[Verse 2]
You asked me how the week was going
The way that you did every Thursday call
Just checking in, just being ordinary
Not knowing there'd be no call after all
I heard it like a hundred others
One more message I'd get back to soon
But soon ran out somewhere around the afternoon
[Chorus]
I keep the pasta on the shelf now
I can't make it, can't throw it away
Your voice still on my phone at seven fifty-two
Saying hey, saying love you, saying have a good day
[Bridge]
There's a bag of tomatoes in my kitchen
I grew them just to see if I could do it right
I wrote the recipe out on paper
I left it somewhere in the house tonight
[Final Chorus]
I keep the pasta on the shelf now
I can't make it, can't throw it away
Your voice still on my phone at seven fifty-two
Saying hey, saying love you, saying have a good day
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