| Squeeze – Labelled With Love Lyrics | 9 years ago |
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I've laboured under the misapprehension for years that the first line of the chorus should end in "I, me and myself"! Aside to that, another interesting song fact is that it very nearly didnt make the album cut. They didnt want to put it out on the album because of the country feel of it. Had it not been for Elvis Costello's persistence and insistence and cajoling as the producer of the album, it wouldnt have made the cut. |
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| Marillion – Happiness Is The Road Lyrics | 12 years ago |
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Based on the book "The Power Of Now" by Eckhart Tolle (think I've spelled his name right). Hogarth is on record as saying that this experience is what is behind the track; dont keep on worrying about the past; its gone. The future hasnt happened yet. All you have is the here and now. And right here, right now this second, do you have a problem? If you do, fix it. If you dont, stop worrying. (your mind will find a way to be unkind to you somehow) the rest of it can be found in the book - "youre a slave to your mind, but you are not your mind, you are not your pain". And of course the pay off - happiness aint at the end of the road - the joy of life is the journey from beginning to end - its better to travel than arrive. |
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| Crowded House – Nails in My Feet Lyrics | 12 years ago |
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where do I begin? I have to admit I wasnt aware of the other documented anecdotes surrounding this song (a backstage fight between Neil and Hess after a gig and someone being caught in flagrante - both touted as possible inspirations behind "the savage review"). Theres also Neil's famous Canadian TV explanation of it being about a pair of aerating sandals for his lawn, which I think in all honesty was a flippant throwaway line. Realistically? Taking the song and the video into account, although he has denied that there is a religious edge to the song, there is certainly a spiritual and very emotional element. "My life is a house/you crawl through the window/slip across the floor and into the reception room/you enter the place of endless persuasion/like a knock on the door when theres ten or more things to do" Suggests to me that his life is very... chaotic, perhaps, full of different things that lay on his mind and demand his attention. Someone has come into this picture who may not originally been part of the plan, but knew exactly how to sneak in, uninvited.. the knock on the door analogy is brilliant. If you're busy doing stuff and up to your a*** in alligators, the last thing you need is someone at the door. So, whoever it is, came into his life at the most inopportune moment. "Who is that calling/You, my companion/run to the water on a burning beach/and it brings me relief" Whether this means that whilst this other person who has sneaked in has got his attention and his companion is then calling him at the same time, adding to more pressure, I'm not sure. Not quite sure about the burning beach beyond the analogy of hot sand in beautiful weather and the refreshing coldness of the sea water as a contrast. Its a simile for something, but I'm damned if I can figure it. "Pass through the walls/find my intentions/circle round in a strange hypnotic state/I look into space/there is no connection/a million points of light and a conversation I cant face" Back to the mind being like a house...with this person moving from one part of his mind to the other where he cant shut it out any more. Look into space - maybe seeking some sort of inspiration, maybe divine intervention, give me a sign? I dont know... "there is no connection" - no rhyme or reason as to why this person has come around and is making such big waves in his mind.. "million points of light" - possible starry night on the burning beach? or a million interrogators lights (like anglepoise) focusing on him - "conversation I cant face" - something you know you have to say but cant ever find the right time to say it - the possible breakup of a relationship maybe when someone or something all consuming that disrupts the status quo comes along - certainly not his own marraige, they've been together since 82 - could be a songwriters 3rd person projection. "cast me off one day/to lose my inhibition/sit like a lapdog on a matrons knee with the nails in your feet" You can only find yourself and truly know yourself after you've been lost/cast off? And once you've found yourself and you're truly comfortable in your own skin, then the loss of inhibitions is a natural by product. The lapdog the matron, the nails... I can only guess that until he is cast off that he will always be in thrall to someone else with older viewpoints that he dare not contradict, maybe someone very religious, or dogmatic, or both, to the point where he has no voice of his own, his "matron" always speaks for him? Wild guess I know but the best I've got. "Woke up the house, stumbled in sideways/the lights came on and everybody screamed surprise/the savage review/it left me gasping/but it warms my heart to see that you can do it too" Woke up the house strikes me as self-realisation, that sort of blinding flash you get when the penny finally drops on what a dope you've been in a particular situation.Embarrassing and enlightening in equal measure. "Lights came on" means to me that those close to him knew that this personal journey had to be completed alone but that they were watching his back the whole time and are just glad to have him back "Savage review"...mmm.. Not sure. dont think it is literal - More inclined to think its a case of the person who stumbled in in verse 1 has proved to him that he/she hasnt been scared to take this journey themselves and show him the way. "total surrender/your touch is so tender/your skin is like water on a burning beach/and it brings me relief" An utterly gorgeous coda... whatever it is that came into his life in verse 1 he no longer views with suspicion following this enlightenment. Surrender/Tender may just be a rhyming device rather than meaning anything, although it is possible that its a third person projection that someone who was difficult to reach previously has now had that icy outer shell melted away by someone new? Big wild guess... "water on a burning beach", a reprise of the first verse where it was used, as a contrasting device... but interestingly here he makes the analogy that the other person's skin is like the refreshing, cooling soothing water, maybe meaning that he himself and his screwed up, too busy mind is the burning beach which he wanted to run to in verse 1? Either way this person has come into his or his subjects life uninvited and as the closing lines in the fade out indicate "in the back row and under the stars/the ceiling is my floor" - he or she has turned his life totally upside down, no matter where he is. It does kind of strike me as a spiritual or religious or even emotional/love awakening and rediscovery. I dont know whether it is in any way autobiographical - because bear in mind, in order to write this stuff down and turn it into a song, the thought has to be in your head in the first place and something put it there. Heaven knows what All I know is the man is a songwriting genious. |
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