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Pink Floyd – Welcome to the Machine Lyrics 12 years ago
I think you will find that it IS a co-incidence, and is actually just David Gilmour strumming a guitar upwards

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Radiohead – Karma Police Lyrics 12 years ago
Karma Police/Arrest this man/He talks in maths/He buzzes like a fridge/ He’s like a detuned radio.
This is the first stanza in Karma Police. From this Stanza, we can hear that the song is being sung from the point of a narrator, who is requesting the “Karma Police” to arrest someone. So what is Karma?

Karma is a concept developed in ancient India whereby a full cycle of cause and effect takes place. It means that an action that one takes, whether it’s positive or negative, will eventually come back to the person who carried out the action and the effect of it as well. So good actions will give the person who carried out the action a positive consequence, and if someone was to carry out a negative or bad action, then they would receive a negative consequence. In simple terms, what goes around comes around. Because there is obviously no such thing as the karma police, the use of the term “Karma Police” is used metaphorically as bad karma, or negative consequences.

We can then see that the lyric “Karma Police, Arrest this man” is a cry from the narrator, claiming that negative consequences should be delivered to this ‘man’, because in the narrators’ eyes, this man has done something wrong, and therefore deserves the negative consequence. The next lines of the song show the use of similes, “He talks in maths, he buzzes like a fridge, He’s like a detuned radio” The listener of the song can then deduce that the narrator wants the “Karma Police” or a negative consequence to act on this man for apparently doing nothing at all. The lyric “He buzzes like a fridge” refers to how the narrator can’t understand him, and he carries on and on. It is clear that the narrator hates the sound of his voice because “He’s like a detuned radio”. It is as if the narrator is dobbing in the man to the Karma Police.

The second stanza re-enforces the first stanza, and shows clear repetition in the first two lines, only replacing “Arrest this man” with “Arrest this girl”. The lines “Her Hitler hairdo is making me feel ill, and we have crashed her party” again show the narrators intolerance to people who are different to himself. It appears that the narrator doesn’t like the hairstyle of a young lady, and in his eyes, is a bad person. The Narrator has judged both the man and woman on small aspects of their personality which are no way crimes, but still wishes bad karma, or the “Karma Police” to act on them. By saying “And we have crashed her party”, the narrator is saying that the Karma Police, or negative karma will act upon not only the young girl and the young man, but all people that the narrator judges and despises, thereby upsetting them, and “crashing their party”. The man and the girl mentioned are representing the people the narrator has intolerance towards.

The chorus of the song then kicks in.

This is what you’ll get/this is what you’ll get/this is what you’ll get/when you mess with us.
Here is a very obvious use of repetition of the phrase “This is what you’ll get”, and the effect that this has is that it re-enforces the message that narrator is trying to convey to the listener. The chorus gives the listener the image of the Narrator being quite pleased at the expense of the group of people, in this case the man and the girl, as they have had negative consequences put on them. “When you mess with us” it is interesting that Radiohead chose to use the word “us”, this implies that the narrator is representing a group, not just himself. Perhaps the group the narrator is representing is society, as people are judged and faced with enormous prejudice for minor things, such as a difference in their personality. This marks the end of the “Action” stage for the narrator. The action stage is the part of the song where the narrator is judging people, and making the requests to the karma police.
Again in the next stanza, it starts off by repeating the phrase and title “Karma Police”, as if the narrator is addressing the karma police, constantly requesting things from them, and this is repeated throughout the first three stanzas.

The next stanza shows the narrator almost complaining to the karma police. “I’ve given all I can, it’s not enough, I’ve given all I can but we’re still on the payroll”. The narrator himself may be receiving bad karma, negative consequences, but this is confusing him because he has gone to all the lengths he can by having the Karma Police arrest the people that his values conflict with. “But we’re still on the payroll”, again the use of “we’re” instead of “I’m” implies that the narrator is representing the group. In this stanza there is even more repetition, possibly re-enforcing the narrators frustration as he himself receives negative karma from the karma police, even though he has helped them by dobbing in the people he thinks should be arrested by them. This is why this stanza is the second stage to the song, the confusion or frustration stage.

Then the music changes key, and the tone and mood of the song does as well. The next stanza goes: “For a minute there/I lost myself, I lost myself/Phew for a minute there/I lost myself, I lost myself.”
The song now enters the third and final realization stage. This shows that the narrator has realized what he has been doing, and that for a minute, he had lost his own character whilst judging others. The narrator realized that judging people on aspects of their personality is an action that is deserving of bad karma itself, and explains why he was still on the karma polices payroll earlier. This stanza is repeated until the song finishes. The narrator was blinded by his hate and intolerance for the other types of people he became the very thing that he was requesting the karma police to bring down.
As mentioned before, the narrator represents a group, and that group could very well be society. Overall the song could be about how society judges people on insignificant in non-incriminating things such as their physical appearance and their personality. Society wishes that these people have negative consequences placed on them. However towards the end of the song, with the key change and tone change, society realized that they themselves are the very thing that they were complaining about and it is themselves who have the personality defects, which is why they were to receive “bad karma”. The overall message is the song then is that in judging people for small things such as personality differences, it is you yourself who is the one who deserves of negative consequences.

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