| Tom Waits – Alter Boy Lyrics | 15 years ago |
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How the hell does anyone see child molestation here? This song about regrets and missed opportunities; wasted away in the church and never found the one for him. Everything he has gained seems to be trivial and un-needed [Now, I can order in Latin, Make em au gratin, Joe], as nothing of it will ever lead to happiness [I never got the rest of the dream, Just the ritual]. He still wanders around hoping to still find her even tough it's far too late [Why is he winking at this time in his life? He never took a wife, cause he s an old altar boy]. I feel Tom is trying to warn us to not waste away, while we can still change anything. [What about you?] |
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| Tom Waits – Christmas Card from a Hooker in Minneapolis Lyrics | 15 years ago |
| It's hard when you listen to the same sad song, the second night. | |
| Alice Cooper – The Saga Of Jesse Jane Lyrics | 16 years ago |
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This song isn't about cross-dressing or anything of that sort. It's about daring to be yourself, where the idea of cross-dressing is just used as a symbol to present it. Here's my interpretation of symbols through-out this song. Jesse Jane - the name of the main character, a cross-dressing trucker. The use of this porn star's name alone shows the whole message Alice wanted to get across. Jesse Jane is regarded as one of the World's hottest women and the general population of males would definitely like to have sex with such a woman (looks wise). By having this ugly cross-dressing trucked be compared to a sex/beauty symbol, shows how Alice seems the same beauty Jesse (porn-star) has, in the fact that Jesse (trucker) isn't afraid to be himself and reveal that he doesn't feel himself as the general male stereotype suggests. The mention of Judy Garland is to show this man's pride about himself (as Judy, while straight herself, was seen to be a gay icon). The reason why he is a trucker is for him to travel around day and night ("I drive a truck all night long") in search to find a place, where he would be allowed to be himself. Yet failing to do so, as seen he find himself in Texas, which is regarded as an ignorant and racist par of America. The line "I was just looking for a happy meal" shows the main character's innocence/non-confrontationist attitude (as "happy meal" is made for children, which ar often used as a symbol of purity/innocence). His choice of happy meal (and the negative reaction he is given after he tries to get it) also shows the Jesse's inability to gain happiness (i.e. the name "happy" meal). "I pulled a pistol from my Wonder-bra I killed him dead. I killed 'em all And they finally caught me in the bathroom stall" This shows how not hiding his feminine side lets him stand against intolerance, yet Jesse is caught in the bathroom (a place that is divided for each gender), thus he is shut down, when he has to come to realize that he may never really be what he wants to. "But I'll tell you one thing, Bubba Someday I'm gonna make someone in here A hell of a wife" For those who don't know "Bubba" is an urban legend of a big black man, who is on top of a prison's sex-chain. I think this shows that no matter where the character will end up in (as Bubba is the main guy in prison, where Jesse is), he will try to find happiness and acceptance. The use of Peter Pan in the last chorus, acknowledges that he won't change for others (i.e. Peter Pan, the boy who never grew up - Jesse Jane, the man who will never give up). |
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