Helloween Giants and Monsters: Track-by-Track Song Meanings
Helloween released their seventeenth album Giants and Monsters on August 29, 2025. This is their second release with all three singers together as Pumpkins United.
Here’s a quick, to-the-point breakdown of what every song on the album is about:
1.Giants On The Run: The opener song is about the inner strength we all carry but rarely show, reminding us that we could be “giants” if we let ourselves.
2.Savior of The World: This one is about a reflection on hoping someone else will take on the burdens we can’t, wrapped in a melodic, tongue-in-cheek metal track.
3.A Little Too Much Is A Little Too Much: Here we have a mix of erotic coming-of-age themes and the idea that small excesses can easily spiral out of control. The last drop can sometimes cause a huge flooding.
4.We Can Be Gods: About breaking free from limitations and taking destiny into our own hands, becoming “gods” of our lives. Doing something that makes us gods.
5.Into the Sun: A duet about reincarnation, spiritual rebirth and honesty. Originally it was about orgasm, but since they decided to make it duet between Andi and Michael, the topic was changed.
6.This Is Tokyo: This one is all about Tokyo and Japan. It’s a tribute to that country and some kind of love letter from Andi Deris.
7.Universe (Gravity for The Heart): A unifying anthem about how every soul is connected like stars in the sky, creating a greater whole. We’re all wired together in the big cosmic web.
8.Hand of God: A meditation on death, life reflection, and whether there’s a guiding hand waiting for us at the end. It is basically about death and wondering who’s waiting on the other side.
9.Under the Moonlight: This tune is about rejecting materialism and empty cravings, favoring simplicity, romance, and detachment from society’s greed.
10.Majestic – The closing track on here is spacey power metal hymn, all about gods, aliens, and ancient mysteries, leaving the meaning open to the listener’s imagination.
In the end, it should be said that every song is open for anyone to dedicate it in their own way and, in that sense, embrace it. Still, these were, in short, the words of the Helloween band members themselves.
Our final ratingl: 7 out of 10
Sign Up For Regular Updates From Junkyard World