Cars and trucks
Fly by me on the corner
But I'm alright
Standin' proud before the signal
When I see the light
I know I'm more than just a number
And I stand by you
Or else we just don't see the others
Computer age, computer age, computer age

Bikes and vans
Fly by me on the desert
But I'm alright
Standing out here in the hot sun
When I see the light
I feel like more than just a number
And I stand by you
Or else we just don't see the others
Computer age, computer age, computer age

Precious metal lines
Molded into highways
Running through me
So microscopically
Days and nights
Weeks and months and seasons
Rolling through me
So chronologically

I need you
To let me know that there's a heartbeat
Let it pound and pound
And I'll be flying like a free bird
And you need me
Like ugly needs a mirror
And day by day
This horizon's getting clearer
Computer age, computer age, computer age


Lyrics submitted by danger bird

Computer Age Lyrics as written by Neil Young

Lyrics © Hipgnosis Songs Group

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Computer Age song meanings
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    General Comment

    I own every Neil Young album that's been officially released, and have about 60-70 additional songs of his that never were released on various bootleg tapes and CDs.

    The only reason I mention that is because of all the great songs that Neil Young has given the world, this is probably one of my top 5 favorites of his, and I feel it gets unfairly overlooked simply because it's a "Trans" song with the vocoder.

    There's such raw emotion in this song. It's obvious that he wrote this completely with his son in mind --- a quadriplegic, non-oral cerebral palsy victim who he couldn't communicate with normally.

    I see the first three verses as Neil trying to change himself in order to become close to his son --- he slows down time (Cars and trucks fly by me on the corner), exposes himself to unnatural environments (But I'm alright Standing out here in the hot sun), and even attempts to internalize the passage of time in order to approximate his experience to his son's experience.

    Yet by the last verse, he realizes the fruitlessness of his efforts, and is reduced to simply stating that he needs his son to know that he's alive, but that his son's particular problems makes his presence unnecessary (And you need me / Like ugly needs a mirror).

    And that just makes the song even more heartbreaking.

    thermo4on January 09, 2007   Link

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