submissions
| Muse – Micro Cuts Lyrics
| 19 years ago
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This song is absolutely brilliant.
As for my opinion, I think it is something more deep than hatred. Perhaps a level of hatred beyond any sort of comprehension. I'm thinking maybe this hatred is aimed toward some sort of dominating force or authority that the person (being Matthew Bellamy, I guess) cannot deny.
As for the word blane, I've looked it up a few times and the closest thing I can come up with is the word blain. It means an area of swollen skin or a sore; a blister; a blotch. Seems to make little sense though. |
submissions
| The Doors – My Wild Love Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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I love the mystical feel of this song. It ties into Jim's whole affinity for Indians. I'm not saying the song is directly about drugs but it definitely seems like it had something to with a trip someone had or something like that. |
submissions
| The Doors – Five to One Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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The only problem with your theory blamedtonight is that the lyrics "trade in your hours for a handful of dimes" is a reference to how the "hippies" if you will panhandled for hours a day and made just enough money to survive |
submissions
| The Doors – Back Door Man Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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It's a song written by and old blues man so it cant have anything to do with Jim's fondness of anal sex ... unless he decided to cover the song as a sort of pun. But the song was originally about a man sneaking in the back door to have sex with women. Thats it. |
submissions
| The Doors – When The Music's Over Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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Now that I look at the lyrics closer it seems to me that this could possibly be Jim Morrison's little "I'm faking my death" clue. Sort of like the whole Paul is dead thing. Here is my point:
"When the music's over turn out the lights" After Jim took a break from writing music to focus more on poetry he suddenly died.
"Cancel my subscription to the resurrection" Maybe Jim was saying after I'm gone I'm not coming back. Why would he specify this. Perhaps a hint that he faked his death.
"Alive, she cried" Perhaps another clue insisting he would still be alive after he died.
Well that's my opinion. I'm one of those skeptics who believe Jim could still be alive. Mainly because he idolized Rimbaud so much. Go ahead and yell at me and call my crazy if you want. But that's my opinion. |
submissions
| The Doors – Dead Cats, Dead Rats Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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Yeah, It's on the Absolutely Live Album. It's basically just Jim doing his whole Improv peotry in their songs thing. I'm not sure if it has any deeper meaning. Sounds to me like it's about politicians. |
submissions
| The Doors – Horse Latitudes Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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Most of you pretty much hit it dead on. It was a poem he wrote in high school about the Horse Latitudes. The Horse Latitudes were between 30 and 35 degrees and trade ships would get stuck there because it had calm changeable winds. In order to get out of the area they would have to "lighten their loads" and most of them just dropped all of their horses. So thats where the name Horse Latitudes comes from. But I like how Jim uses such vivid Imagery and uses the color green to represent death. |
submissions
| The Doors – People Are Strange Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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Ray Manzarek himself explained the song. He said he and Jim wrote it one night when Jim called him and said he was going to kill himself and not to go look for him. Jim had been missing for hours from a studio rehearsal and was wandering the streets. Ray went to look for him at one of Jim's favorite hangouts on a cliff overlooking L.A.. They sat there for the next few hours writing the lyrics and talking. Then they went back to the studio and added music to it. |
submissions
| The Doors – The Celebration Of The Lizard Lyrics
| 20 years ago
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I've got a live recording of this where Jim explains to the crowd what it is about and he said (verbatim) "It's about ... It's about a bunch of young people who got ... fed up, with where they were living and what was happening. They got a group of them together and went out to the desert to live, away from everyone. And each night they'd build a fire and they'd gather round and they'd ... sing songs and discuss, what was happening and where they were at ... and all that."
Doesn't explain too much ... but it does have alot of excerpts of jim's poetry and some other songs. |
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