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In the Backseat Lyrics
I like the peace
In the backseat
I don't have to drive
I don't have to speak
I can watch the countryside
And I can fall asleep
My family tree's
Losing all it's leaves
Crashing towards the driver's seat
The lightning bolt made enough heat
To melt the street beneath your feet
Alice died
In the night
I've been learning to drive
My whole life
I've been learning
I like the peace
In the backseat
I don't have to drive
I don't have to speak
I can watch the countryside
Alice died
In the night
I've been learning to drive
My whole life
I've been learning how
In the backseat
I don't have to drive
I don't have to speak
I can watch the countryside
And I can fall asleep
Losing all it's leaves
Crashing towards the driver's seat
The lightning bolt made enough heat
To melt the street beneath your feet
In the night
I've been learning to drive
My whole life
I've been learning
In the backseat
I don't have to drive
I don't have to speak
I can watch the countryside
In the night
I've been learning to drive
My whole life
I've been learning how
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to me, the "backseat" is a metaphor for living a life that you are no longer in control of emotionally.
the imagery of a family tree "losing its leaves" and the line "alice died," seemed to suggest that a family member of hers has died ( i imagine a younger sister or something). after this, the speaker in the song simply can't function and spends her life in the "backseat," letting other people make decisions for her because she simply doesnt care anymore. the fact that the speaker watches dreamily from a window while other people are "driving" her, and also the word "asleep" imply more passivity.
as for "i've been learning to drive my whole life," maybe this traumatic event (a sibling or other family member dying) happened when she was very young and she never recovered from it. she's been gradually learning how to cope but she still isn't ready to take the wheel.
i could be completely wrong about the details, but nevertheless this is a beautiful song.
First, everyone should go out and purchase the actual album, because it is one of the best of 2004. Also, you learn alot about the band in the inner pamphlet. It isn't the normal Jewel case insert... it looks identical to a funeral program. In it you read "When family members kept dying they (Arcade Fire) realized that they should call their record 'Funeral.'" Also, the album is dedicated in memory of 9 individuals. Two of which bear the last name 'Chassagne' and one is named 'Alice.' Regine Chassagne is the female vocalist for Arcade Fire. So now I come to the song meaning, it is about the death of Regine's mother Alice. The backseat is a metaphor for control in her life. She used to always have someone (the driver) to look up to in her life, and didn't necessarily have to make any tough decisions on her own. Now, with the death of her mother, she has "crashed into the driver's seat" and now needs to take control of her own life. Her entire life, she's been learning how to mature and be independent, and now she's almost forced to grow up. But hey, what do I know? Your guess is as good as mine. Spread the word, these guys rock. See them live and you'll know what I'm talking about.
P.S. Anyone care to explain "the lightening bolt made enough heat to melt the street beneath your feet"
I know this comment is a bit late...
I know this comment is a bit late...
I think this lyric refers back to the song Wake Up in which "With my lighnin’ bolts a glowin’ / I can see where I am goin’ to be" is sung.
I think this lyric refers back to the song Wake Up in which "With my lighnin’ bolts a glowin’ / I can see where I am goin’ to be" is sung.
The lightning bolts here are acting as a guide, but they are contradictory as they melt the street she's on, the same one she cannot properly follow, and glue her in place. So she is "stuck forever" and can never go to the place she needs to be.
The lightning bolts here are acting as a guide, but they are contradictory as they melt the street she's on, the same one she cannot properly follow, and glue her in place. So she is "stuck forever" and can never go to the place she needs to be.
Well I don't think it's related to Wake up, I think it means the death happened so quickly and the aftermath of the death has taken away a support as sturdy and fundamental as a road and something you couldn't imagine being without. So it's likening the death of her mother to someone pulling the ground from under her feet.
Well I don't think it's related to Wake up, I think it means the death happened so quickly and the aftermath of the death has taken away a support as sturdy and fundamental as a road and something you couldn't imagine being without. So it's likening the death of her mother to someone pulling the ground from under her feet.
holy crap, holy crap. this song is like, oh my lord. when i first heard it, and she sand "i've been learning to drive my whole life..." i was like....so consumed! with.... i dont know what! i got chills and my heart palpitated and i couldn't breathe and i wanted to cry but knew i must'nt. it is simply a song, no need to get ridiculous.
but ah, this song demonstrates what i love most about music--- it's ability to stop me dead in my tracks.
yeah. after around 3 mintues it's like: "holy shit".
yeah. after around 3 mintues it's like: "holy shit".
Think about it: everybody over the age of 20 is expected to drive, but remember when you were a kid and your parents drove you everywhere? I like the peace in the backseat.
when i first heard this song it was kinda late at night, the day i had gotten the cd and i figured i would give it a try. i zoned out for a lot of it but this song just caught my attention, because it was the girl singing or because it was at the end of the disc., i don't know. you know those songs that just fit perfectly with the mood of a movie or something, the kind that just wanna make you cry or laugh or have fun along with the movie? this song can give you that feeling, without the movie itself. when it ended I was like "woah, what just happened??" i agree that its about possibly loss of a family member, ut i thought it was more about coming of age, perhaps reluctantly gaining responsibility, but not shirking it because she doesnt care. i have no real evidence for that, its just what i thought about the lyrics. when i first heard it. maybe just the fact that she says "I've been learning to drive" as if she has known that this was coming, and doesnt want to grow up or take on some certain position or responsibility, but knows that she will have to sometime soon, because suddenly the "leaves" of her family are falling; perhaps a kind of loss of innocence thing. but its weird that the song itself makes me happy but its idea is so depressing...
This music it's about Regine's mom (called Alice) who died in the year that were producing the album funeral. Regine never learned to drive, ok. Her mother was very ill in the hospital, so, Regine needed to go to hospital urgently. Even without know drive, she took the family's car and was driving to the hospital. But in the midle of the way, her mother died in the hospital. Yes, it's very sadly DDD8
(PS: sorry of my bad english. I'm brazilian, er...)
@dedags No, Not really. She was in the backseat of a car on her way to her mother's funeral.
@dedags No, Not really. She was in the backseat of a car on her way to her mother's funeral.
And in this music don't have the line "Oh, Norah!". It's just "oh oh oh", just vocal sounds LOL
Kinda what wannabelle said. I think the family member who passed on in the song was someone she was heavily influenced by and/or had played a major role in her life. The line about learning to drive is learning to live with out this family member as she grew up and became more independant. In this song, she misses the role that person played in her life, remembering fondly the passiveness of when that person influenced or played the role in her life. At the end, she realizes she must learn to live with out.
I totally agree with this. My dad died of cancer when I was 15 and I've always felt that this song was a good representation of how I feel about his death.
I totally agree with this. My dad died of cancer when I was 15 and I've always felt that this song was a good representation of how I feel about his death.
I can't wait to see these guys at Coachella. This song is really sad. I think everyone is right about the metaphors...the lightning bolt line might be like something happening unexpectedly (like a death) and all of a sudden you don't have the support of the street beneath you...something like that. All I know is that her voice is beautiful.
This song is just... Brilliant. I remember going to my grandma's funeral, my mother in the passenger's seat. My aunt was driving, and I actually liked the peace in the backseat, because i didnt have to drive or speak and could easily drift off watching the landscape soar by. This song to me is that moment. Displaced and surreal.