I remember
Ooh, how the darkness doubled
I recall
Lightning struck itself

I was listening
Listening to the rain
I was hearing
Hearing something else

Life in the hive puckered up my nights
A kiss of death, the embrace of life
Ooh, there I stand 'neath the Marquee Moon
Just waiting

I spoke to a man down at the tracks
And I ask him
How he don't go mad
He said, "Look here, junior, don't you be so happy
And for heaven's sake, don't you be so sad"

Life in the hive puckered up my night
The kiss of death, the embrace of life
Ooh, there I stand 'neath the Marquee Moon
Hesitating

Well, the Cadillac
It pulled out of the graveyard
Pulled up to me
All they said, "Get in, get in"
Then the Cadillac
It puttered back into the graveyard
Me, I got out again

Life in the hive puckered up my night
A kiss of death, the embrace of life
Over there I stand 'neath the Marquee Moon
But I ain't waiting, uh-uh

I remember
How the darkness doubled
I recall
Lightning struck itself

I was listening
Listening to the rain
I was hearing
Hearing something else


Lyrics submitted by tubesocks, edited by yugedralya

Marquee Moon Lyrics as written by Tom Verlaine

Lyrics © Rocking Gorillas Music Ltda

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Marquee Moon song meanings
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  • +1
    My Interpretation

    Somehow, Tom Verlaine wrote this song before the blackout of New York City which happened on July 14, 1977. Marquee Moon was released in February of that year. But the lyrics hauntingly recount the night when the city went black. "I remember, when the darkness doubled, lightning had struck itself." A major lightning storm the night before is what caused the blackout as major power lines were knocked out, increasing loads to others, until finally the system went out. "Listening to the rain, I heard something else." That something else he heard was civil unrest and the madness that ensued once the lights went dark.

    In the midst of a financial crisis, the dog days of summer and the city living among a rampant serial killer, NYC was at the brink of cracking. And once the lights went out that night, in many neighborhoods, the city did just that. Violence, looting, arson and insanity were uncontrolled. Urban civilization became unglued that night, and mayhem ensued, resulting in the most arrests in the city's history. The city at that time was bankrupt and many public services had been cut as a result. "When there is an internal decay of a social structure (that's) important in a city, it just takes on little spark, one little thing to hit it, to set it off."

    'Waiting', 'hesitating', 'I ain't waiting nuh uh', all seem to hint at phases of herd mentality.

    "Life in the hive puckered up my night, A kiss of death, the embrace of life." When relating this line to the Blackout of '77, I take it to mean NYC may have hit it's darkest moment that night, the blackout being its kiss of death. But once you hit bottom, there's only one way to go, the embrace of life. New York obviously rebounded from this night in 1977, undergoing many changes leading to what the city has become today.

    tim1125381on August 09, 2015   Link

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