| Elton John – Hey Ahab Lyrics | 7 years ago |
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having written more than anyone needed/wanted me to (and 7 years late to the party, no less) i return to the top to apologise for it. no need to repeat previous commenters’ thoughts, but i do think i’ve got something. the whale ahab pursues in moby dick symbolises his irrepressible drive to succeed, so it would make sense to speak about him in a song that deals with life’s everyday hardships, as the others have said. indeed, the first verse suggests that such a quarry would give the bored and disenchanted something to do with themselves. ahab’s single-mindedness turns out to be a bit of a bummer, though. his all-consuming passion extends even to the rejection of god, and in his faustian adventure he brings devastation to his ship and crew. the book is rich with religious allusion, and the comment here about jonah strikes the same note - jonah pluckily rejects god’s instruction to go to nineveh, jumps ship (literally) and is duly punished into repentance. if we’re ‘caught like jonah’, it can only be because we’re pursuing the wrong goals, or living in willful ignorance. still, to be ‘caught’ like jonah and yet asking an ahab for a ride ‘out of here’ seems entirely circular (unless my shabby reasoning and surface-level interpretation of books i barely understand is putting me wrong, but i’ll let you be the judges, there), and simply exchanging one folly for another. but i think the comment about ‘hope allowed’ is the most suggestive. dante famously spotted a sign on his way into hell inviting him to leave his hope with the umbrellas (a comment which i’d guess we should have in mind here too: ‘all hope abandon, ye who enter here’), but the situation set forth in the song would, in contrast, be a little more what you make of it. the sign on this wall reads ‘hope allowed’. it’s not hell, then. but don’t be too hopeful: the contrasting of vitality and petrification, of agency with inanimacy -suggested by the carved bones and rose tattoo in verse two- explicitly favours the latter, we being ‘a far cry’ from the rose. so, between two sinners (incidentally, ahab takes his name from scripture: an apparent wankstain of a king ‘more evil than all before him’, who, if you couldn’t guess, ruins everything for everyone by worshipping the wrong god), we find ourselves looking for meaning, wellness, or just something to do. wisdom is thin on the ground, all about is ‘cryptic’. we’re ‘rolling through pages lost for words’. if a solution is proffered, it’s really more of a hasty a patch job: drop your tools and get the hell out of dodge. the tone is almost decadent, certainly rambunctious, particularly in the chorus when we’re aggressively grabbing at ahab’s coattails; it’s not a song about being optimistic, so much as a paen to the throwing of caution to the wind: confusion and strife are rampant. the horizon awaits. eat your heart out. |
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| Kate Bush – This Woman's Work Lyrics | 12 years ago |
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purely speculation on my part, but i think this song is about the simeltaneous moment of birth and death, when the arrival of a child forces a new dad to consider the unsatisfactory relationship he had with his own dying father. when the birth is over the woman's work finishes, and it becomes the father's work, in that he is now responsible for the child as well - with emphasis on the importance of a paternal father; this necessity being stressed by the young father's sombre reminisces. |
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| Tunng – The wind-up bird Lyrics | 12 years ago |
| i find these lyrics kind of hard to interpret. either they're pretty esoteric or i'm missing something obvious. still, if you haven't heard of it there's a book called the wind-up bird chronicle about a guy whose wife mysteriously disappears, and he spends much of the rest of the novel in the dark at the bottom of a well trying to break through a wall in his mind into a hotel room where a sinister figure is keeping his wife prisoner. or something. it's by a guy called haruki murakami and everything he writes is weird. the song could have something to do with that? | |
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