Jeeves’ “Where Did All The Good Men Go?” is not just a song—it’s a reckoning. With the intimacy of Ed Sheeran and the poetic craftsmanship of John Mayer, Jeeves carves out a space where grief and longing meet truth. From the very first line, you sense this track wasn’t written for charts—it was written for healing. It’s the kind of song that says what many are afraid to ask out loud: Where are the role models we so desperately need?
What makes this single remarkable isn’t just its lyrical honesty—it’s the weight of its creation. Written during the aftermath of the #MeToo movement, and refined over eight years, the track feels lived-in and earned. There’s real ache in the phrasing, especially as the string arrangement swells behind the verses like a deep breath held too long. Aaron Sterling’s percussion anchors the emotion, giving Jeeves’ voice the scaffolding it needs to soar.
In a cultural moment where masculinity is under a long-overdue microscope, this song becomes both question and comfort. Jeeves doesn’t pretend to have all the answers, but in his asking, he gives us space to feel seen. “Where Did All The Good Men Go?” feels like a whispered prayer and a public catharsis all at once—and it couldn’t be more needed.
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