Driemo’s Spiderman song review
“Peter Parker, Peter Parker… She never liked Peter Parker, but she never knew that Peter Parker was Spiderman.”If you have been listening to Driemo’s Spiderman and thought he was singing “be the bagger, be the bagger,” don’t worry. You are not alone.
Many people enjoy the beat but don’t fully understand the song. Yet, this is one of the biggest tracks on his Magician album.
Driemo is at the top of his game, and every song he releases gets people talking. Spiderman is no different. At first, listen, it’s a fun, catchy song that makes you want to dance.
But if you pay closer attention, it tells a clever story about how people think, make choices, and sometimes chase exciting dreams while ignoring what is right in front of them.
The song is about a young woman who dreams about Spiderman, imagining herself flying across rooftops and living an exciting, adventurous life, all while missing the dependable Peter Parker standing right beside her.
The lyrics show the main idea clearly: “She loved the idea of being in love with Spiderman… She never liked Peter Parker, but she never knew that Peter Parker was Spiderman.”
Driemo shows how people often fall for something flashy, exciting, or rare, while ignoring something steady and valuable.
Psychologists call this the idealization effect.
People tend to overvalue rare or exciting things and undervalue ordinary, everyday things.
In the song, Spiderman represents fantasy, excitement, and adventure, while Peter Parker represents reliability, presence, and real opportunities.
Economists would call this an opportunity cost.
By chasing Spiderman’s excitement, she misses the real chance she already has with Peter Parker. This happens in real life too.

For example, imagine a girl dreaming of dating a president or a celebrity because she thinks that’s the ultimate prize, while she’s actually dating someone who is going to become a future president — a real opportunity she ignores because it doesn’t seem glamorous.
Think about someone chasing a high-paying job abroad, believing success is only outside the country, while missing the chance to grow a successful business at home.
Even in friendships, people sometimes ignore loyal friends who have always been there, while seeking attention from the flashiest or most popular people in the room.
Driemo adds local flavour and humour with Chichewa lines like:“Sikuti amachita dala, eh dala, kuti asankhe zachibwana, eh dala, nanga akadatani mwana, eh mwana, poti amafuna Spiderman.”
These lines are funny and easy to relate to, but they also remind listeners that fantasy can blind us, and reality, even if it seems ordinary, can hold real value.
Musically, Spiderman is catchy and easy to sing along to. The chorus repeats: “She never liked Peter Parker, but she never knew that Peter Parker was Spiderman.”
The beat is fun, but underneath the fun is a real lesson about life, choices, and understanding what matters.The album title, Magician, makes sense.
Driemo uses his music like magic, turning a story about obsession and fantasy into a lesson about life, opportunities, and human behaviour.
The song entertains, teaches, and makes listeners think at the same time.The main message is simple: don’t chase Spiderman if Peter Parker is already standing quietly beside you.
Whether in love, work, or personal goals, we often ignore what is real while chasing something flashy.
Driemo’s Spiderman shows that music can do more than entertain.
It can teach, inspire, and make us think, all while keeping us dancing.