| Regina Spektor – The Trapper and the Furrier Lyrics | 8 years ago |
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It has taken me many iterations reading the lyrics and repeatedly listening to “The Trapper and the Furrier“ to begin to answer why they affect me as strongly as they do. For me it is a realistic depiction of where we stand today in America - the triumph of greed over any other aspirations - no less so here in our early 21st century climate of self-worship and narcissism. Paragraph by paragraph: The first strikes deep chords in me, as a Plymouth Plantation descendant, having just finished reading “Bradford's History of Plymouth Plantation“ where the former governor spends much of his time complaining about the colony’s treatment by business partners – in the fur trapping trade. It was a paradise for some – and laid the foundation for what was to come. The seeds of the capitalist/elitist ideology of Calvin. It was not the “City on a Hill” that I expected – it was more like pure self-interest. I can relate to paragraph two as the employee of a corporation – where every turn hides an inherent conflict of interest between owners and workers. Progress is defined as the one-sided balance of corporate over individual interests. It’s hidden behind rhetoric and ritual and is, again, a paradise for some, but only some. I read paragraph three as a customer in the American medical system, laden with similar conflicts of interest. It is reflected in a legalistic pharmacological approach designed, ultimately, to prop up yet more capitalistic elites rather than perform an underlying useful function – to cure people of disease and improve lives. The refrain ties these all together for me by describing the underlying motivation – greed - and the raw fact that those who already have resources are given more, resulting in the continued growth of economic disparity – “Those who don't have lose, those who got get given More, more, more, more”. The refrain within the refrain is an even more powerful distillation of the underlying message. All this is accomplished without identifying specific parties at fault, but instead reflecting the underlying realities normally obscured by layers of rhetoric. It’s an attempt to impart a level of awareness more akin to Samuel Beckett than Bob Dylan. It is what it is – greed – let’s simply admit it. It’s an underlying theme of America present from our earliest days and a preeminent description of the motto of the 21st century - "More". |
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