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Further On (Up the Road) Lyrics
Where the road is dark, and the seed is sowed
Where the gun is cocked, and the bullet's cold
Where the miles are marked in the blood and gold
I'll meet you further on up the road
Got on my dead man's suit and my smilin' skull ring
My lucky graveyard boots, and song to sing
I got a song to sing, to keep me out of the cold
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Further on up the road
further on up the road
Where the way is dark and the night is cold
One sunny morning we'll rise, I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Now I been out in the desert, just doin' my time
Searching through the dust, lookin' for a sign
If there's a light up ahead, well brother I don't know
But I got this fever burnin' in my soul
So let's take the good times as they go
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Further on up the road
Further on up the road
Further on up the road
Further on up the road
One sunny mornin' we'll rise I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
One sunny morning we'll rise I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Where the gun is cocked, and the bullet's cold
Where the miles are marked in the blood and gold
I'll meet you further on up the road
My lucky graveyard boots, and song to sing
I got a song to sing, to keep me out of the cold
And I'll meet you further on up the road
further on up the road
Where the way is dark and the night is cold
One sunny morning we'll rise, I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Searching through the dust, lookin' for a sign
If there's a light up ahead, well brother I don't know
But I got this fever burnin' in my soul
So let's take the good times as they go
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Further on up the road
Further on up the road
Further on up the road
And I'll meet you further on up the road
One sunny morning we'll rise I know
And I'll meet you further on up the road
Song Info
Submitted by
deathbear On Aug 25, 2002
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Come on, this is about the US Army hunting bin Ladin. And they met him.
wow, i cant believe no one has left a comment. i love this song. its my favorite from The Rising.
anyway, my idea is that he is searching for something, a relationship or something else, but he cant seem to find it. "Now I been out in the desert, just doin' my time Searching through the dust, lookin' for a sign If there's a light up ahead, well brother I don't know", could mean that after searching and searching, he has finally found hope, "further up on the road"
"Where the road is dark, and the seed is sowed. - Where the gun is cocked, and the bullets load. - Where the miles are marked, in the blood and gold - I'll meet you further on, up the road."
Everybody wants to be wealthy. For some people the search for wealth becomes its' own stigma. This is clearly a song about gold fever, and how the character in the song is obsessed with finding gold in the desert. Picture him wandering the desert with his spike and hammer, chiselling away at rocks, looking for a claim. The opening stanza gives us an insight into the rest of the song, and the rest of the song follows suite.
He doesn't know if he's ever going to find a life beyond his obsession, a happier life in the future. But he isn't looking that far ahead. Right now he's only looking for gold, his driving ambition.
I first heard this on the Seeger Sessions Band tour (at Birmingham). It was a stunning song then, with all the band coming together to sing in in a slow, melancholy style. I swear I listened to it with my mouth wide open.
Then I heard the Rising version. I wasn't expecting it to be better. It was.
I love genesin2000's post, "This is clearly a song about gold fever." haha what? it might be about that, but it's definitely not clear. i'd say considering springsteen's writing style it's pretty possible the "desert" is a metaphorical one, meaning he's been lost in a lonely no-man's land due to an unresolved conflict. I tend to think the song is about revenge. The guy in the song is a badass. He wears a dead man's suit, a smiling skull ring, and sings songs to keep his revenge-obsessed mind calmed. He's counting on meeting whoever wronged him further on up the road. If it was written about September 11th like most of the rest of the album, it could be about a widowed man's thirst for revenge on those who took his wife.
I agree about the revenge motif. My family just experienced a real betrayal by someone we thought was a friend, as so did another mutual friend. this was the song that bubbled up in my heart and mind. The beauty of the song is the ambiguity - it seems to be both about a desire for revenge but also for resolution and maybe even transcendence. Anyway, I learned to play the Johnny Cash version and intend to make it one of my standards.
I agree about the revenge motif. My family just experienced a real betrayal by someone we thought was a friend, as so did another mutual friend. this was the song that bubbled up in my heart and mind. The beauty of the song is the ambiguity - it seems to be both about a desire for revenge but also for resolution and maybe even transcendence. Anyway, I learned to play the Johnny Cash version and intend to make it one of my standards.
Lucy
Lucy
Simply put, this song is about a man who finds himself experiencing the darkness on the edge of town. The song is non-descript: it could be an outlaw, a soldier, or the blue collar (anti-) hero of so many Springsteen songs. But he's there. The first verse overviews the situation, the journey ahead is one where some get paid and others pay in blood. The second verse is the man's bravado; his gallows humor in describing his clothing and his reliance on his song to sing is his own attempt to find strength. The third verse is the reality -- he's alone, lost, searching, and he doesn't know whether he'll come out of this thing. But still, the hope that humanity (the fever in his soul) will save him.
"I'll meet you further on up the road" is a promise to make it through. It's a farewell put off (what do you say to the ones you leave behind when you head off into danger?). It's also an acknowledgement of something better no matter what -- "one sunny morning, we'll rise I know" is refusing to acknowledge the finality of mortality.
Personally, in the context of 9/11, I've always seen it as a song about a military man confronting the war ahead. However, I believe this song pre-dates 9/11 (possibly from the Tom Joad era?).
If you look at the imagery of the lyrics you get a clear picture of a wander type narrator, in some ways conjuring images of characters from Western movie such as Clint Eastwood’s ‘Man with no Name’ (‘gun is cocked’ ‘miles are marked in the blood and gold’) and Franco Nero’s ‘Django’ (‘dead man’s suit’ ‘graveyard boots’) whilst also suggesting such musical heroes as Antonio Banderas’ ‘El Mariachi’ (‘song to sing’). Without specifically naming or referring to any specific character the lyrics create an image of a stereotypical gunslinger/vagrant in a desert. So on the surface the song could be said to be about a gunslinger confronting his violent and dangerous lifestyle, searching a literal or metaphorical desert as he is driven by the fever in his soul, perhaps aimed at someone specific who is to wait further on ahead for the answer.
However I feel this immediate imagery makes more sense when taken in context of the album, while maybe not about 9/11, certainly seems strongly influenced by the Christian themes of the album. If you see the desert as possibly an allusion to Jesus’ 40 days in the desert, or perhaps a more broad ‘desert of the soul’, a concept backed up by the lines ‘Searching through the dust, looking for a sign… but I got this fever burning in my soul’. In this context the original imagery of a gunslinger/vagrant could be seen as a state of mind, being both an ideal of individuality & self-reliance while also being very violent and morally grey, perhaps representing these qualities in the average person. When this image goes through the desert as an allegory for temptation, self-reflection, or hardship then lines such as ‘If there’s a light up ahead, well brother I don’t know’ ‘let’s take the good times as they go’ & ‘One sunny morning we’ll rise I know’ begin to become as possible allusion for the search for God, morality, or simply the self.
I guess I think this song is about is about putting one’s life on hold, sending it further on up the road to wait for the narrator to find some kind of answer, and holding onto the optimism that things will work out in order to make such self-reflection possible. Just my opinion though ^_^
I agree that you all have some great explanations for this song. What I hear when I listen to it gives me the picture of something out of Poltergeist II.
A timeless entity from somewhere during the gold rush and this entity is saying "I will get you sometime," with the vague statement "I'll meet you further on up the road" collecting on people's misdeeds.
The description of his attire (dead man's suit, smiling skull ring, lucky graveyard boots) sounds sinister. The line "one sunny morning, we will rise I know" brings the idea of him forecasting when its all catching up home.
as far as i'm concerned, this is a song about coping with death -- it's addressed to a lost loved one
You can interpret it as you like… That’s the god thing about free will. And normally a song means something different to each person. But sorry to tell you this, but this is a Johnny Cash song.
@laustsen Sorry to tell you that this is not a Johnny Cash song, he recorded it for his 2006 last album, but the song was written by Bruce Springsteen and released 2002 on "The Rising"
@laustsen Sorry to tell you that this is not a Johnny Cash song, he recorded it for his 2006 last album, but the song was written by Bruce Springsteen and released 2002 on "The Rising"