| Streetlight Manifesto – Somewhere in the Between Lyrics | 17 years ago |
| I think the entire album is just mixed messages about religion, some lyrics saying it's good, some saying it's bad. Except The Receiving End of it All and Watch it Crash. | |
| The Arrogant Sons of Bitches – I've Got Enemies In High Places Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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This set of lyrics isn't completely correct. Anyway I don't know what the Hell this song means, but it's pretty damn good! |
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| Streetlight Manifesto – Supernothing Lyrics | 17 years ago |
| It's only been 12 years, Lunar Mix. But w/e. | |
| Gimp – Supernothing Lyrics | 17 years ago |
| I agree with daghastlybeast. | |
| Streetlight Manifesto – A Moment of Silence Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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Look assholes it is not about Catch-22. Tomas even said that the part with, "If you hate me so much then stop singing my songs!" is not a reference to Catch-22. It is about social outcasts you dumbfucks. And FFS, why am I the first fucking person to say this?! My apologies to those of you who didn't act like assholes. |
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| Streetlight Manifesto – Down Down Down to Mephisto's Cafe Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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The song confuses the sh*t out of me. Basically let me sum it up: 90% of the lyrics are atheist. 10% are not. When he says, "We're going...to Mephisto's Cafe," That means Hell, since Mephisto is the devil. I wouldn't say that's anti-religious or pro-religious. He also says that a man told him, "You'll never have to choose a side. It's rewarding, but O the road is hard," It sounds to me like there is a reward for being good, which would be Heaven. But it also kind of says that it equals out because the road is hard. Mephisto's Cafe also sounds like a place where people get deceived to me. Sorry if I'm coming across as religious, but that's how I see it. But everything else in the song kind of says, "Religion is an excuse to argue with each other". But the last verse after the man gets "broken wide open" is something I don't really understand at all. |
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| Streetlight Manifesto – Riding The Fourth Wave Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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I think this song just tries to explain how... OK, I really have no witty remark for the jackass who posted this. Sorry. |
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| Streetlight Manifesto – One Foot on the Gas, One Foot in the Grave Lyrics | 17 years ago |
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I think what most of you have said is true, most of the album is anti-religious, but it seems like this one is the one that teaches the exact opposite of the other songs! For the most part, this song is anti-religious, yes, but the last line is more for religion than against it. It says, "We might just make it after all, on our own," Which says we can make it without God. But then it goes on to say, "But we had one foot on the gas, and one foot in the grave! Everyone was laughing when we said we had it made." It kind of sounds like you thought you could get somewhere without God, but you ended up dying and people were laughing at you. But the rest of the song says stuff like, "We want it, they got it, They claim we'll die without it, But something tells me they were wrong!" This sounds kind of anti-religious, but it says he wants it, so I dunno. Actually, when I said earlier that every other song on the album is anti-religious, I was wrong. Tho closer you look, the more contradicting lyrics are in the songs. But overall, I think the entire album is pretty much saying Tomas is "Somewhere in the Between". That's my interpretation. |
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