| Lulu – The Boat That I Row Lyrics | 1 year ago |
| Nice pretty love song from a prominent popstar 😊 | |
| Incredible String Band – Darling Belle Lyrics | 1 year ago |
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So pretty, like almost all ISB! So sad, I think this one’s about a soldier going to WWII - which was not very far from memory in the ‘60s and even the ‘70s - and not coming back, told from the point of view of a girl whose older brother was one such soldier (when Licorice sings) and from the point of view of the soldier (when Robin sings) Licorice’s vocals are piercing but beautiful; Robin also lilts and emotes in the most effective and affecting way. |
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| Puscifer – Polar Bear Lyrics | 1 year ago |
| @[JessePetas:49639] great connections! Thanks for that! | |
| Old & In the Way – Midnight Moonlight Lyrics | 2 years ago |
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The Alamo was a sad instance when Mexico tried to retain control of Texas by killing a bunch of people. Similar to Little Big Horn, where the Indians won the battle but lost the war, The Alamo was a last gasp of Mexican control over Texas. This song, by suggesting a meet-up at the chapel in the Alamo to pray to the Virgin for healing, indicates that if people gather to worship and ask forgiveness, even at the scenes of bad events, they won’t be disappointed. However, the best part of the song is when they sing, “in the moonlight, midnight, moonlight” - which would still be the case even in the event of all the other lyrics telling a different story, imho. |
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| Blind Melon – The Pusher (Steppenwolf cover) Lyrics | 2 years ago |
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Blind Melon’s song “The Pusher” Snow flakes rolling over my ear, goose bumping weather If I'm hungry at 4:30 in the morning, Pink Dot will deliver And I'm oh so tired of you pushing that thorny crown Down onto my head so hard, my knees are two inches in the ground And I said, God damn, God damn that Bible pushin' man You know I smoked a lot of grass and I've popped a lot of pills But I've never done nothing that my spirit couldn't kill And I walk around with these tombstones in my eyes But I know the pusher don't care, if you live or if you die. And I said, God damn, God damn that Bible pushin' man. Godamn, Godamn, Godamn, Godamn, God damn Steppenwolf’s “The Pusher” https://youtu.be/3XqyGoE2Q4Y You know I've smoked a lot of grass O' Lord, I've popped a lot of pills But I've never touched nothin' That my spirit could kill You know, I've seen a lot of people walkin' 'round With tombstones in their eyes But the pusher don't care Ah, if you live or if you die God damn, The Pusher God damn, I say The Pusher I said God damn, God damn The Pusher man You know the dealer, the dealer is a man With the love grass in his hand Oh but the pusher is a monster Good God, he's not a natural man The dealer for a nickel Lord, he'll sell you lots of sweet dreams Ah, but the pusher ruin your body Lord, he'll leave your, he'll leave your mind to scream God damn, The Pusher God damn, God damn the Pusher I said God damn, God, God damn The Pusher man Well, now if I were the president of this land You know, I'd declare total war on The Pusher man I'd cut him if he stands, and I'd shoot him if he'd run Yes I'd kill him with my Bible and my razor and my gun God damn The Pusher God damn The Pusher I said God damn, God damn The Pusher man Totally different purport: Steppenwolf is explicitly objecting to hard drugs & those who sell them, enlisting “my Bible and my razor and my gun.” When they say, “You know I've smoked a lot of grass O' Lord, I've popped a lot of pills But I've never touched nothin' That my spirit could kill” - they’re using a poetic inversion: By “my spirit could kill” from the context, it’s clear that they mean “anything that could kill my spirit” They draw a distinction between the dealer and the pusher. The dealer is part of the scene, spreading good cheer & sweet dreams. The pusher is only in it for the money, which they use to insulate themselves from the life of the community as they vampirically suck its life. In fewer words, Blind Melon objects to anti-drug evangelism. They are pretty much rebutting most of Steppenwolf’s message, but using some of the same imagery. They start off with snowflakes rolling over their ears, 430 in the morning with munchies - it could be a quiet sweet mood developing, like in “Sleepyhouse,” but apparently all the anti-drug propaganda weighs on their mind & they can’t relax. Anyhow, the mood is all broken & they blame the Bible-thumping fundamentalists. - when they say “I’ve never touched nothin’ that my spirit couldn’t kill” It’s kind of a macho thing: “I’ve never met the drug I couldn’t handle (so stop bothering me about it!”) This is a dangerous stance. Sadly, experience tells us even great people have met drugs they can’t handle! They acknowledge this by the line “And I walk around with these tombstones in my eyes.” What’s also disturbing is that there is no Bible pusher physically present - the irritation apparently is something they’ve absorbed previously, maybe by being dragged to church as kids, or watching anti-drug ads that used to be so prevalent (I haven’t seen any lately, but maybe I’m not watching the right shows?) So seemingly, they are reacting to something or someone who isn’t even there, but has spoiled their fun. It sort of reminds me of that scene in _Huckleberry Finn_ where Huck’s alcoholic father goes on a bender and, in the privacy of his cabin, commences to verbally shower curses on everybody in town, and when he’s done, he curses them all again in case he missed anybody the first time. However! I still like the song and buy into it, (though it will never be my favorite Blind Melon tune) because of the emotional weight of Shannon Hoon’s voice, and because also the anti-pleasure orientation of so much of fundamentalist religion, based on the frankly horrible shenanigans of the Old Testament deity - many of whose actions are sadistic and immoral - is behind a lot of the misery in the world. It’s hard to relax even with a good buzz on, even with snowflakes rolling on their ears, and food being delivered, because the news and past experiences aren’t easily disregarded. I happen to think there are better ways to overcome misery and depression: “light a candle instead of cursing the darkness” type of thing. Walk right by the evangelists with their bullhorns on the way to the Electric Daisy Carnival…pray for them to abandon their miserabilist creed & embrace fun for a change, and, y’know, avoid the hard drugs while we’re at it. Steppenwolf preaches physical violence against the (drug) pusher, but one big problem with that is those folks are mean & have a head start. Another problem is “you become what you hate,” or more practically, when you take up violence, as Eisenhower said, “every dollar [and every minute] invested in war is stolen from human needs.” With that in mind, Blind Melon is actually more practical in using words against the threat. So it’s sort of a reply to Steppenwolf, but also has a message of its own. If I were in the group, I’d try to add another verse where they calm down & get back to the nice buzz that was developing in the first 2 lines. |
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