"Fast car" is kind of a continuation of Bruce Springsteen's "Born to Run." It has all the clawing your way to a better life, but in this case the protagonist never makes it with her love; in fact she is dragged back down by him.
There is still an amazing amount of hope and will in the lyrics; and the lyrics themselve rank and easy five. If only music was stronger it would be one of those great radio songs that you hear once a week 20 years after it was released. The imagery is almost tear-jerking ("City lights lay out before us", "Speeds so fast felt like I was drunk"), and the idea of starting from nothing and just driving and working and denigrating yourself for a chance at being just above poverty, then losing in the end is just painful and inspiring at the same time.
All those people that you know.
All those people that you know.
All those people that you know,
Floatin' in the river are logs.
I could buy myself a reason.
I could sell myself a job.
I could hang myself on treason.
All the folks I know are gone.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know
Floatin' in the river are logs.
So I ate the wedding cake
'til the whole damn thing was gone.
And I'm gonna drown the ocean.
Now ain't none o' that so wrong?
All the people that you know.
All those people that you know.
All those people that you know
Floatin' in the river are gone.
Gonna take this sack of puppies.
Gonna set it out to freeze.
Gonna climb around on all fours
'til all the blood falls out my knees.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know.
All those people that you know
Floatin' in the river are logs.
Well let's take this potted plant
To the woods and set it free.
I'm gonna tell the owners
Just how nice that was of me.
I could buy myself a reason.
I could sell myself a job.
I could hang myself on treason.
Oh I am my own damn god.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha
All those people that you know.
All those people that you know,
Floatin' in the river are logs.
I could buy myself a reason.
I could sell myself a job.
I could hang myself on treason.
All the folks I know are gone.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know
Floatin' in the river are logs.
So I ate the wedding cake
'til the whole damn thing was gone.
And I'm gonna drown the ocean.
Now ain't none o' that so wrong?
All the people that you know.
All those people that you know.
All those people that you know
Floatin' in the river are gone.
Gonna take this sack of puppies.
Gonna set it out to freeze.
Gonna climb around on all fours
'til all the blood falls out my knees.
All the people that you know.
All the people that you know.
All those people that you know
Floatin' in the river are logs.
Well let's take this potted plant
To the woods and set it free.
I'm gonna tell the owners
Just how nice that was of me.
I could buy myself a reason.
I could sell myself a job.
I could hang myself on treason.
Oh I am my own damn god.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha
Lyrics submitted by nuclearjesus
This Devil's Workday Lyrics as written by Isaac Brock
Lyrics © Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC
Lyrics powered by LyricFind
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This sounds a whole hell of a lot like a Tom Waits song.
Exactly my thoughts
thank you or mentioning him! i searched him up and now i own one of his albums! XD
I agree that this song is about nihilism, and the rejection of the community's god in favor of putting oneself up as god. However, I would add that there seems to be an underlying element of loneliness in that rejection.
All those people that you know are both 'logs' and 'gone.' If they were just useless, they would only be logs. But they're not just logs floating in the river, they're /gone,/ they're dead. To me, this conjures the picture of a wash of bodies floating lazily down a river, face down, like logs... all those folks you know were your community. Now they're bodies.
The speaker (singer?) starts out by telling you how all the folks you know - YOU, the one he's talking to - are only logs. He is telling you that they are meaningless as he tells you that they are dead. In trying to glorify his philosophy, he will repeat this over and over, the folks you know are logs, the folks you know are gone, so as to convince you that your community can't save you, that his way is the right way.
He then explains how his way has value without people: "I can buy myself a reason, I can sell myself a job" - he doesn't need to invest in someone else's reason for living or grand cause, he can buy his own on his own. He doesn't need to sell himself to anybody in order to get a job, because he can work for himself. "I can hang myself for treason" - he can even be his own judge, jury, and executioner if he decides he's done any evil in the world.
It becomes apparent in the rest of the song, however, that he will never do this except to benefit himself.
"So I ate the wedding cake til the whole damn thing was gone" - Wedding cakes are specifically made for a community, and they celebrate the birth of a new family unit, which is the cornerstone of a community. By eating all that cake himself, the speaker is scorning that community by taking more than his "fair share." There is no "fair share" to him because nothing is "fair" unless he says it is.
"And I'm gonna drown the ocean" - I can only guess that this means that he's going to drown the whole ocean of people. It's ironic to drown water. Perhaps he is doing something ironic to people - taking advantage of the community the way he feels they have taken advantage of him. "Now ain't none of that so wrong" because he judges it not to be so wrong, of course. Purely subjective of him, and the only subject he cares about is himself.
"Going to take this sack of puppies Going to set it out to freeze Going to climb around on all fours Until all the blood falls out my knees" He doesn't value cute animals, and it isn't because he thinks of himself as a higher animal - he, himself, climbs around on all fours like a dog. He just doesn't care - freezing is a particularly apathetic way to kill something. He doesn't care if his animalistic lifestyle hurts him, he can damn well bleed to death out his knees from scraping them against the ground, he knows it and is practically bragging about how he doesn't care if he hurts himself.
"Well, let's take this potted plant To the woods and set it free I'm going to tell the owners Just how nice that was of me" This is a proposition, unlike the puppies stanza, which was a statement of intent. It's a hypothetical proposition - he probably doesn't actually care about the freedom of the potted plant. He's just pointing out that people don't actually care about other's freedom. They judge what should be free and what should be locked up, and if you tell them different, they'll say you're crazy. Possibly the speaker feels that he was, (or that you are), a potted plant, and breaking him (or you) away from society's rules makes him (or you) 'free.'
After this, he repeats his mantra again - "I am my own damn god." And he laughs. But it's bitter. He knows he's lost something, and he doesn't know what or why, because it's become this strange ache which warps him, ever present. He can't see it any more than a fish can see water. He has become an average devil.
Brother man Mookah, I really wish I was fortunate enough to have met you in my life at some point. Out of all the people here, in my opinion you are the closest so far to his interpretation of his lyrics. You have done what seemingly few here have done, which is to plug yourself into the mind of Isaac Brock the best you can, and with remarkable accuracy (once again, in my opinion). The only thing that I feel that you are off about is the logs comment. If you listen to his other songs there is a strong vibe that he believes that all of time has already passed, and "those people that you know", not the ones that are gone, but the ones that are here, are already gone too, they just haven't realized it. This life in his opinion I believe is the realization of that fact. All of life before this moment seems as if just a moment, or a collection of memories that amount to the same thing. We are all already gone.
I think that if you take this visual, of logs floating in the river, and apply it to Float On, that song becomes less unabashedly optimistic than most people interpret it to be. In a sense, Isaac is saying: "Whatever happens in your life, no matter how bad, doesn't even really matter in the grand cosmic scheme of things because we are so small and unimportant. The river of time and life keeps floating, and we all float on; we never even really mattered."
Seems to be a very nihilistic message. Essentially, I can do whatever I want because "I am my own damn god". None of it really mattes what we do and we're just logs floatin' in the river. Whatever it's saying... I dig 'dis.
Ha, you would never expect someone who didn't know what nihilism meant to even understand this song. These lyrics are so misinterpreted on this site to the extent that it's irritating.. or is it just me?
I interpret this as a declaration of independency. "All those people that you know Floating in the river are logs" People with freedom of choice are just going with the flow and not bothering to think for themselves.
I can't in any way believe this song is related to satan in any way, but i do agree that this sounds a lot like Tom Jones.
@blenderhead Tom Jones? really Tom Jones.
This song is one of those fuck-you-I-don't-need-anyone-else-and-you-can-all-go-fuck-yourselves songs. It's like a tantrum set to music. Great and I love it.
"I can't in any way believe this song is related to satan"
Why NOT? It's called The Devil's Workday.
I think you're right, moochersminion. Good News for People Who Love Bad News has this whole heaven/hell thing going on, and that's awesome. He's singing it from satan's POV, obviously. Day in the life....
The "hang myself for treason" line is pretty damn awesome in my opinion. I think it refers to Judas Iscariot.
God I love Modest Mouse for their symbolism and allusions. It's almost like literature.
it sounds like a song a bad guy in an old cartoon would sing with the old jazzy horn they use
The dumbfuck who uploaded these lyrics forgot the brilliant "AH HA HA HA HA" at the end.
It's "This Devil's Workday". And I love the vocals in this song.
ok....i thought ive heard the weird of the weird of some modest mouse songs but this just crosses the line ...yet modest mouse still rocks!