72 Meanings
Add Yours
Share
Q&A

Black Cadillacs Lyrics

And it's true we named our children
After towns that we've never been to
And it's true that the clouds just hung around
Like black Cadillacs outside a funeral
And we were done, done, done
With all the fuck, fuck, fucking around
You were so true to yourself
You were true to no one else
Well, I should put you in the ground
I've got the time
I got the hours
I got the days
I got the weeks
I could say to myself I've got the words but I can't speak
Well I was done, done, done
With all the circ, circ, circling around

I didn't die and I ain't complaining, I ain't blaming you
I didn't know that the words you said to me
Meant more to me than they ever could you
I didn't lie and I ain't saying I told the whole truth
I didn't know that this game we were playing
Even had a set of rules

We named our children after towns
That we've never been to
And it's true that the clouds just hung around
Like black Cadillacs outside a funeral
And we were laughing at the stars
While our feet clung tight to the ground
So pleased with ourselves for using so many verbs and nouns
But we were all still just dumb, dumb, dumber
Than the dirt, dirt, dirt on the ground
Well, wings on flames
Kings with no names
Well, this place just ain't got air right now
You were so all over town but still Crayola brown
Well, you should run around yourself right now
And we were done, done, done
With all the fuck, fuck, fucking around, circling around
Song Info
Submitted by
nuclearjesus On Apr 09, 2004
Questions and Answers

Ask specific questions and get answers to unlock more indepth meanings & facts.

72 Meanings

Add your song meanings, interpretations, facts, memories & more to the community.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

I'm surprised no one has mentioned the whole death factor. The majority of this album (Black Cadillacs, Dig Your Grave, the Devil's Work Day, Satin in a Coffin, Bury Me With It... catching a trend here?) is about the death of someone close to Isaac, though not necessarily loved. There are interviews specifiying this. This is not about a romantic breakup. This is a death; didn't anyone nostice all the funeral imagery? It's in the title.

Isaac flat-out states that "I didn't die and I ain't complaining, I ain't blaming you," as in: one of us died, and it wasn't me; it was you. The identity of whose death inspired so much of the (brilliant) lyricism within this album hasn't been made public, but I suspect it's his mother (though I haven't found the proof yet.... just go with me here).

Isaac's mom dragged him all over the country in fanatical religious sects as a child and forced him to live in 1) an abandoned, flooded house (until he was evicted) and 2) a shed. You're supposed to love your mom, but it sure would be hard under these circumstances, and the bitterness shines through in this song/album.

I don't think the "we named our children after towns we'd never been to" line actually applies to Isaac naming his own children, as he has none, but more of a reflection on ignorant parenting (also reflecting the numerous different towns Isaac grew up in) which his mother seems to have been a pro at. This would exemplify the line "I didn't know that the words you said to me meant more to me than they ever did you," which is a pretty standard flaw in fanatical Christian hypocrisy.

Isaac's a fantastic lyricist, and you've got to dig deeper than love/breakup songs. He rarely sings about that stuff, it's too cliche. What makes this album so fantastic is the honest complexity in which he is dealing with the death of someone, mother or not, who he did not know if he loved or hated. It's neither straight-up grief nor relief, and that's much more real than anything most people ever write about.

i think this was a great interpretation. one thought about "we named our children after towns we'd never been to" which strikes me as wistful: it's almost gives a sense of belonging once removed, if that makes sense, or wanting to belong to a place removed from where you actually are...and that by naming your children after those places, it's a projection in at least a couple different ways: projecting your children into the world and perhaps closer to that "place", projecting that sense of discontentment on them in a way that they can never ignore in the...

I still view this as a romantic song. Death imagery is a common theme on the album, but not every song has to be about it.

I don't quite get how you got "I didn't die and I ain't complaining, I ain't blaming you," to mean that someone else died. I see it as more of an explanation that a bad break up hurt, but he obviously isn't going to die from it, and that he doesn't blame the person for the pain, because they had to make the choice to leave.

Looking up at the stars and...

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

i agree with most of what you said, 764-mouser, but i didnt agree with "He's supposed to be writing for the FANS not the masses." i think artist should write what they are thinking/feeling, not what anyone else wants

@SpringE exactly! A true artist writes for themselves. Having people who enjoy your art is always good but should never be priority.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

Great Song Great Band Great Album

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

I LOVE this song. "We named our children after towns that we've never been to" is such a great line. and now i want to name my children like that.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

Yeah, so much knowledge of facts (names of towns and nouns)but it means nothing, but no personal experience. All their learning just made more masks to hide behind, and he's sick of it all.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

First of all, Insulting this record would be like making fun of a kid with down syndrome because many may not know this, but Isaac and the band went through a lot of hardships while making this album: Jeremy leaving, DUI's attempted murder charges, jail time, they actually started over at a point, and the list goes on. you can see it in the lyrics, its about bad news and how bad shit happens, etc.

But that out of they way, this was an alright album, but compared to their last 3 LP's it doesn't compare, and its hard to blame the record company because EPIC did a great job with the Moon & Antartica. It was Isaac's choic to make an album with shorter songs, but the thing we love about Modest Mouse IS the 7 minute songs and deep lyrics and cheesy effects. He's supposed to be writing for the FANS not the masses.

Regardless, I think this is a very cool song and has great meaning. along with Bukowski, Blame it on the Tetons and The Good Times Are Kiling me.

@764-mouser no. He’s supposed to be writing for HIMSELF. He owes no one anything.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

I must say I agree with sirgarycoleman. I have to believe that a band as great as Modest Mouse would not waste their time on love songs (all the time, if even at all) and they leave you searching for a deeper meaning in the lyrics. At least that's what I think, if not than what good would Modest Mouse be compared to all the other corny rock bands around? Nah, I still think Modest Mouse's lyrics are on the same level of the Mars Volta and the like, though this album is really not their best. Still, I love Modest Mouse.

@gustergusher Though, Little Motel is clearly about the end of a relationship

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

Good song, good song. It's about going to school (which is a waste of life), being 'educated' and still being fucking stupid. Like most people. That's what I think, anyways...

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

To me, the background of this song is a serious argument between two people and an analysis of one of the primary sources of the conflict: restlessness caused by their mutual small-mindedness. The people in the argument think highly of themselves but have never done anything or been anywhere. They named their children after towns they have never been to and laughed at the stars while their feet clung tight to the ground. The death imagery suggests that they are not really living life even while they are alive. They are standing around waiting to die like hovering hearses. “A Different City” also touches on this suffocating sense of suburban myopia.

“You were so all over town but still Crayola brown” may refer to the phrase “to paint the town red.” Although the person is thinks he/she is doing exciting things (painting the town red), he/she is in fact doing nothing and going nowhere.

Still, I think twougly people also has an interesting interpretation about the double meaning of stars.

Cover art for Black Cadillacs lyrics by Modest Mouse

what i dont like is that everyone either thinks the songs are about relationships (which i personaly dont think modest mouse would waste their time with) or the band selling out or sticking to its roots. i've been to many other modest mouse songs and these are all the same guesses by everyone. i think honesly that 80% of everything they write is "inside writing" and that it has a lot of significant value to the band but we dont know much about it. (like portugals songs use weird imagery from alaska that doesnt mean much to one of us.) just a thought