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Reckless Lyrics

Meet me down by the jetty landing
Where the the pontoons bump and sway
I see the others reading, standing
As the Manly Ferry cuts its way to Circular Quay
Hear the Captain blow his whistle
So long she's been away
I miss our early morning wrestle
Not a very Happy way to start the day
She don't like
That kind of behaviour
She don't like
That kind of behaviour

So, throw down your guns
Don't be so reckless
Throw down your guns
Don't be so

Feel like Scott of the Antarctic
Base camp too far away
A Russian sub beneath the Arctic
Burke and Wills and camels
Initials in the tree
She don't like
That kind of behaviour
She don't like
That kind of behaviour

So, throw down your guns
Don't be so reckless
Throw down your guns
Don't be so
Song Info
Copyright
Lyrics © Sony/atv Music Publishing Llc, Warner/chappell Music, Inc.
Writer
Gilles Bousquet
Submitted by
marelle On Jun 22, 2002
18 Meanings

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Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

Lead singer James Reyne is not from Sydney, but on face value, this song is an obvious reference to the morning ferry commute from the northern seaside suburb of Manly across the harbor (Oz "harbour") south to Circular Quay, where watercraft of all shapes and sizes dock. It's adjacent to the city center and business areas.

The subtext of this song deals with Robert Falcon Scott, known as "Scott of the Antarctic," and his tragic expedition, actually reaching the South Pole only to discover that Roald Amundsen had just beaten him and then dying on the return. In a similar vein, Irish/English explorers Burke and Wills were the first to cross Australia from south to north only to starve, too weak to move, a few miles from salvation. They were actually camped by a tree that had buried provisions, but misunderstood the markings on the base camp tree.

Thus, the underlying meaning of this song could be:

He has spent an unspecified time alone ( "So long she's been away...") and is now waiting to meet his girlfriend who is arriving on the Manly ferry. The references to Scott/Antarctic, Burke & Wills, and a Russian sub beneath the Arctic are telling us how alone he felt, presumably during previous nights; dramatizing the feeling of utter isolation. While waiting, he is also warning himself, soliloquizing, not to be reckless or unnecessarily boisterous in front of her when she arrives, because she hates that behavior and may leave him again.

The line, "Throw down your guns" means don't show traits such as recklessness, aggressiveness, or extreme independence popularly associated with cowboys. For many a jilted lover, the song contains a hint of cosmic irony.

Song Meaning

You nailed it

@CorgiKid Beautiful interpretation.

@CorgiKid Close, but no cigar

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

There is a rift between him and his girlfriend ("so long she's been away"). He doesn't know when or if she's coming back. But the problem is his behaviour. There's something he's constantly doing ("she don't like that kind of behaviour"). We're not told what it is, but it's driving her away. He's telling himself not to be so reckless. He's losing her. Stop fighting. Stop 'sticking to your guns'. Throw down your guns. Give up that kind of behaviour.

But he won't or can't change. It's so close it's within his grasp, like Scott (base camp beyond his reach), or a Russian sub trapped beneath Arctic sea ice (near home but can't get there) or Burke Wills perishing in the desert (so near yet so far). He's a bit of a tragic! He going to lose her and he just can't make that little bit of extra effort to get there and win her back. Aren't we all a bit like that?

My Interpretation

A bit more. He's obviously on his way to work, catching the Manly Ferry. That's where he met his girlfriend, and it reminds him of her and how long she's been away. He misses her ('not a very happy way to start the day').

@argie777 I think a lot of men in Australia have been indoctrinated by previous generations into adopting traits of what is now known as 'toxic masculinity'. It was pervasive in this country for years - still is, but with more attention cast upon it, and perhaps more of an incentive to avoid/change. This song, whether it be about physical violence against a lover, or just general recklessness whether it be cheating or emotional abuse, is an example of that time in Australia where boys tried very hard to aspire to these traits, in a kind of cult of manhood. Or...

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

As a poet and writer myself, I never cease to be amazed at how much power can be invested in simple cliche images and ideas when used in a different context. Nick cave takes biblical stories we all know and compares them to being in love. Aussie Crawl do the same here with Australian stories. I think the way the Manly Ferry "CUTS" it's way to Circular Key is very moving, but the line "Burke and Wills and Camels/Initials in the tree" is a knockout. It's not poetic, it's not original, but by applying that story to how lost he feels, we are at that lonely, haunted tree with him.

@PaulSouth So true. Poetry IS an amazing way of using language as metaphor to plumb the imaginative recesses of our soul in order to enhance emotion and understanding; it's truly as vital as oxygen for a healthy existence. It's sublime

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

I think this song is about irreconcilable differences between the singer and his girlfriend, and between men and women more broadly. Behaviour that he thinks is daring and great, she sees as reckless and wrong. The examples of "that kind of behaviour" that she doesn't like are famous feats of male bravery, with two of them seen as extremely heroic in Australia in 1983. He wants to take risks and fight and achieve great things, but she thinks he's taking risks for no good reason. The singer knows neither can change so the relationship is doomed, which is why it's such a melancholy song.

Another thought: the lyrics above include the lines

e>Don't be so Feel like Scott of the Antarctic

But I don't hear the word "feel" in the song. So instead of the first line ending mid-sentence, these lines are one coherent sentence: "don't be so like Scott of the Antarctic".

But I don't hear the word "feel" in the song. So instead of the first line ending mid-sentence, these lines are one coherent sentence: "don't be so like Scott of the Antarctic".

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

Some of the interpretations in this "Reckless (Don't be so)" thread are wild. It is not about heroin or addiction. The whole song is about being alone.

When asked about the meaning of this song during an interview, James Reyne laughed and said it has no deep meaning...it's just a collection of thoughts on being alone. He acknowledged he didn't even know if the "Russian sub beneath the arctic" reference was an actual event or simply a childhood memory.

Obviously there's a through line about the man's lost relationship. But, everything else is just tagging this idea of being alone.

Some people interpret the line "I miss our early morning wrestle" to be about heroin or addiction. It's not. I grew up in Sydney (Reyne's 11 yrs older than me) and "wrestle" was used as a very common euphemism for sex during the 70s. My parents and their friends would use the term all the time.

Song Meaning
Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

I love this song so much. I heard it for the first time when visiting Oz.

Now with the Ukraine/Russia story Im also loving any song that has a message of reconciliation and peace and mutual respect.

Such profound depth in the song tho. The emotional reference is bottomless. So beautifully deep.

@Jamajico Agreed 👍

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

Top Notch Song!

A band who is a true testament to great Ozzie music. Beautiful metaphors to the Ocean and the Bassline - O, the Bassline! Bloody Mega!

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

I think he's treated his girlfriend badly, and they have broken up. This happened some time ago and he regrets it deeply.

I thought the first line was:

"Met down by the jetty landing"

In other words, he met her at the ferry wharf. He is there now and it reminds him of her and when they were happy.

The second verse is how he feels about the breakup - a tragic failure despite having tried hard to survive (Scott, Burke and Wills) and lonely and invisible (Russian sub).

The music evokes a winter's day on the harbour. It's windy and cold (pontoons bump and spray when the water is unsettled and whipped up by wind). Life is dreary and pointless without her.

Great song.

Nice work! Good interpretation imho

Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

I personally think this about a past relationship, perhaps they are still in the fight? And he just wants it to end. 'throw down your guns' i think is like, give up the fight or something.

And the artctic thing.. well im not sure... maybe its about being so far from everything?

My Interpretation
Cover art for Reckless lyrics by Australian Crawl

SO this seems to be yet another song about heroin. I'll go through the lyrics line by line but first I'll summarise. The song tells of the morning journey from Manly to the city (and presumably Kings Cross) to 'get on' (buy a hit). The experience of the addict standing apart from the people commuting to work, and the daily wrestle of trying not to use heroin when they are addicted are part of the song,

Meet me down by the jetty landing Where the the pontoons bump and sway

The song locates us, waiting for the ferry. You may be in a hurry but you can't go anywhere while you wait. A bit like waiting for a dealer. The pontoons bumping and swaying makes me think of a live crowd at a gig.

I see the others reading, standing As the Manly Ferry cuts its way to Circular Quay

The singer is apart from normal people who don't do what he does. The are standing where he is sitting or fallen in a sense. Presumably he is 'hanging out', feeling sick until he can get on. But more so, he is a failure compared to the people with jobs and healthy lives.

Hear the Captain blow his whistle So long she's been away

'She' is heroin and he is hanging out. The captains whistle conveys the urgency of the trip and its progress into the busy Circular Quay area.

I miss our early morning wrestle Not a very Happy way to start the day

Waking up, hanging out and deliberating about getting on, is not fun. Maybe he misses it because there is no deliberating these days. He has to use every day.

She don't like That kind of behaviour She don't like That kind of behaviour

Heroin is in charge now and she doesnt like him thinking that he can not use for a day. The drug is portrayed like an aggressive dominatrix.

So, throw down your guns Don't be so reckless Throw down your guns Don't be so

The singer is telling the listener not to toy with heroin. Put down the needle before you start and certainly before she takes control.

Feel like Scott of the Antarctic Base camp too far away A Russian sun beneath the Arctic

He is cold, desperate, dying, isolated from humanity and there is a kind of dead headedness i think in active heroin and methadone addiction that could be like having a polar ice cap over you and between you and the sky

Burke and Wills and camels Initials in the tree

He is too far from help and out of the living water

She don't like That kind of behaviour She don't like That kind of behaviour

So, throw down your guns Don't be so reckless Throw down your guns Don't be so

So the title of the song relates to what gets people in trouble with drugs despite being warned - they think "it wont happen to me" but like an explorer exploring drugs, they can recklessly push to a point where they are beyond help.

I think this is a very powerful song with real investment by the writer.

Song Meaning

@LucasVG It seems Reyna wrote other songs on the topic of heroin addiction (see Hammerhead) but that doesn’t necessarily mean he was an addict. Considering the subject matter and the wide network of the Reyne family, it’s quite possible the songs were ghost written by a struggling addict.

I’ve had a couple more thoughts. All related to the theme of water and the intimation that the singer is not going to survive.

In his explorer metaphors he offers people dying because they were in an environment of frozen water, under water and too far from water. Water...

@LucasVG The reason “put down your guns” can be interpreted as “put down the needles” is because heroin addicts use a needle to ‘shoot up’ hence the gun imagery.

@haulinoates This may be the most precise and lucid interpretation I've ever come across about a song. This is basically the very same one I've been telling since its release in '83. I questioned my interpretive nouse because people thought I was WAY off course, so THANK YOU. It seems obviously about heroin addiction and the ritual to obtain and use. Having known people with the problem it was strangely familiar and easy to apply. I can't understand why it isn't widely interpreted as such - but that's probably a good thing, because it means it's not too rampant in society...

 
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