Who Wrote The Words I Wish I Said And When Were They Released?

2025-10-27 19:09:40 54

7 Answers

Una
Una
2025-10-28 09:55:35
I’ve bumped into the phrase 'Words I Wish I Said' in tiny corner-of-the-internet creations enough times that my gut says it’s not a single famous work but a recurring title for personal songs and poems. My experience is that most versions pop up as independent releases or posts, and their release dates vary widely — commonly somewhere in the 2010s depending on the platform.

If I had to give practical advice from memory, I’d say check the original post or track page for the upload date and credits; that usually tells you who wrote it. I love how many different people have used that phrase — each version feels like a little time capsule of regret and honesty, and they always stick with me for different reasons.
Theo
Theo
2025-10-28 18:21:27
Okay, so if you typed 'Who wrote the words i wish i said and when were they released?' into my brain-library, I’d tell you up front: there isn’t a single blockbuster song or book everyone points to. Instead, that exact string shows up as titles for multiple independent songs, spoken-word pieces, and fan-made videos. I’ve come across short films and tracks with that name mostly between 2014 and 2020 on platforms like YouTube and Bandcamp.

When I want the precise writer and date, I look for the original upload or the release note on the streaming page — creators usually include credits. If it’s a commercial release, the track page on Spotify/Apple Music often lists the songwriter and the release date. It’s a bit of detective work, but that hunt is half the fun; I’ve found a few underrated gems that way and always walk away with a warm, wistful playlist.
Chloe
Chloe
2025-10-28 22:07:06
From a collector’s point of view, I approach titles like 'Words I Wish I Said' like catalog entries that need verification. The phrase itself is generic enough that multiple people have used it independently, so answering "who wrote it and when" requires narrowing down the exact item: is it a self-published poem on Tumblr, a lo-fi song on SoundCloud, or a registered composition on a PRO? I’ve tracked similar cases by searching performing rights organization databases (ASCAP, BMI, PRS), looking up ISRC codes on Discogs, and cross-referencing release pages on Bandcamp and streaming services.

In practice I find that many pieces with that title were first uploaded by bedroom artists around 2015–2019, while other versions — spoken-word videos and compilations — trickled out through the 2010s. If you have a specific clip or line in mind, the release date is usually the upload timestamp, and the writer is usually credited in the description or the metadata. I like that this kind of query forces me to dig into credits; it’s a small reminder that lots of heartfelt work lives in the margins and has real authors behind it.
Blake
Blake
2025-10-30 01:53:32
There’s a good chance you’re asking about a song or a short poem titled 'Words I Wish I Said' — and that title gets reused a lot. When I’m impatient and want an answer fast, I flip between three places: the streaming platform page (Spotify/Apple), the lyrics/annotation site (Genius), and a rights database (ASCAP/BMI). Spotify sometimes shows songwriter credits directly on the song’s 'Credits' tab; Genius can tell you who people think wrote the lyrics, and ASCAP/BMI will tell you who registered the composition. Those three together usually give the full picture.

If the thing you found was on social media rather than a commercial release, the simplest approach is to check the original post for the username and the date — a lot of writers post lines like that as captions or images. I once tracked down the author of a short piece that had been reposted everywhere by following the earliest Instagram upload and then matching it to a blog post with a proper byline; that revealed both the writer and the original publication date. So, if you want a precise name and date, start with credits and registrations. Personally, I enjoy these little sleuth missions — it’s like digital archaeology for phrases I wish I’d noticed sooner.
Ian
Ian
2025-10-31 03:16:16
This one’s a bit slippery because the phrase 'Words I Wish I Said' isn’t owned by one famous, canonical work — it’s more like a pop-culture breadcrumb that lots of people have used. When I dug through streaming sites and blog posts in my head, what kept coming up was the pattern: indie musicians, poets, and vloggers have all slapped that exact phrase (or tiny variations) onto songs, short poems, and heartfelt videos across the 2010s and early 2020s. There isn’t a single universally recognized author who wrote ‘‘Words I Wish I Said’’ as a flagship piece that everyone cites.

If you’re trying to pin down a specific creator and date, the best mental checklist I use is: check the platform where you first heard it (SoundCloud/YouTube/Spotify), open the track or post metadata for upload/release dates, and look at rights databases like ASCAP/BMI or Discogs for songwriting credits. For a lot of bedroom-pop tracks with that title, the release windows tend to cluster mid-2010s onward. I love that ambiguity — it means there are lots of tiny, earnest works out there to discover, each with its own release story and little moments that stuck with me.
Isaac
Isaac
2025-10-31 10:22:52
I’ll be direct: I can’t give a single, definitive writer and release date for 'Words I Wish I Said' without knowing which specific version you mean, because multiple creators have used that exact title. When I want to resolve this quickly I keep it simple — check the song’s credits on the streaming service, then confirm the songwriting registration in ASCAP/BMI if it’s a commercial track. For non-commercial posts, find the earliest social-media or blog source and use that timestamp as the release date. I’ve tracked down obscure tracks this way and it always feels satisfying to connect a line to a person and a moment — hope you find the one you’re after, I always enjoy discovering the story behind a phrase.
Keegan
Keegan
2025-11-02 08:57:16
At first glance, the phrase 'Words I Wish I Said' looks like a single, neat thing — but in practice it's a title a bunch of different creators have used across songs, poems, and social posts. I’ve chased down similarly ambiguous titles before, so here’s the clean way I’d nail this down: start with the release medium you saw it on. On streaming services like Spotify or Apple Music you can often click through to 'Credits' or the album page to see who’s listed as songwriter, composer, and producer. For older or indie releases, Discogs is my go-to for exact release dates and different pressings.

If you want songwriting registrations (the absolute source for who legally wrote a song), ASCAP, BMI, and SESAC databases are lifesavers — type the title in quotes and scan the writer/performer fields. For lyrics and community-sourced credits, Genius frequently lists writers and release dates too, but treat it as user-augmented data and double-check with official credits. YouTube upload dates are tempting, but they often reflect when someone posted it, not the original release.

I’ve used this detective flow to solve my own music mysteries more than once: find the album/EP on Discogs for the release date, crosscheck Spotify credits for writer names, and confirm via performance-rights databases. If the thing you mean wasn’t a commercial song (like an Instagram poem or a Tumblr post), then the poster is usually the author and the post date is your release date. I love how tracking these details can turn into a tiny history lesson about a song’s life, and it’s oddly satisfying to pin down the exact credits.
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