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Enjoy Your Worries, You May Never Have Them Again Lyrics
Voice Samples:
"[Cheers]. Eagle."
"Fault"
"Gentlemen, good luck."
"65 Thursday."
�Because I � just, he kept calling me at night, all hours of the night, calling my husband, my brother, calling me every day; he�s after me, and I � I was devastated I was without a job, without a salary, I was trying to get unemployment and I was told it first kicks in after a few weeks, and I was busy looking for another job, and I also have a heart condition, and I told him I have a heart condition, I said, �Here take a few dollars, I�m sorry this happened to you, just � but just leave me alone, I�m not the person who, deposited the check.��
"I love you. I LOVE you."
"Rainbow. All the music is the rainbow."
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What does it say after this clip ‘Here take a few dollars, I’m sorry this happened to you, just – but just leave me alone, I’m not the person who, deposited the check.’” ?
I think it says "STOP! Money." I am not sure about the second word. I really like that part of the song though. If you listen carefully to the above mentioned sound clip you can help a quiet male voice mimicking the clip. Whenever I listen to it makes me think that the male who is mimicking the clip gets fed up with hearing about the lady's problems, and yells stop to silence her.
It says "STOP! You lying cunt!"
It says "STOP! You lying cunt!"
@Danielthy Reminded me of Butthole Surfers' 22 going on 23"
@Danielthy Reminded me of Butthole Surfers' 22 going on 23"
“Because I – just, he kept calling me at night, all hours of the night, calling my husband, my brother, calling me every day; he’s after me, and I – I was devastated I was without a job, without a salary, I was trying to get unemployment and I was told it first kicks in after a few weeks, and I was busy looking for another job, and I also have a heart condition, and I told him I have a heart condition, I said, ‘Here take a few dollars, I’m sorry this happened to you, just – but just leave me alone, I’m not the person who, deposited the check.’”
I'm almost possitive this clip is from a movie untitled Crazy Love. It was a documentary about a obsessive, in a sense dangerous, relationship. The silent voice of the man in the background is also from this movie.
Interesting.... I kinda want to see it now. :D
Interesting.... I kinda want to see it now. :D
They left out the part about
"Uh Myself, April, Tammy and Brad"
Which goes on after the lady with the heart condition's rant....... JUST SAYING.
"I love you, I love--" is from the film Alphaville. It cuts off at the end because the character speaking has a heart attack.
Traveling on public transport whilst listening to this song, you can cast people for the vocal parts. There is always a fit I tell you.
i never really knew what to take from this song. the books are pretty difficult to analyze because most of there music are samples... but one day, the title got to me, "enjoy your worries, you may never have them again". I think it simply means to enjoy (not in teh sense of "to take pleasure in" but a bit more like "utilize" your worries (the things you worry about), because if you don't, they might come true, and thus, you will never have them again.
As someone who has been on anti-depressant medication, I think the title is more about embracing emotion of any sort - even the bad. If you're on medication you pretty much don't feel anything. No highs or lows.
As someone who has been on anti-depressant medication, I think the title is more about embracing emotion of any sort - even the bad. If you're on medication you pretty much don't feel anything. No highs or lows.
Also, as spreadeagle135 said: We worry about the things we care about.
Also, as spreadeagle135 said: We worry about the things we care about.
does anyone know the rest of the words in this song?
The other words, particularly the ones at the end are in Chinese, I believe.
Anyway, I think the song is about memories--their parallel to changing channels on the television is not accidental, rather it serves as a commentary to how the barrier between memory (humanity) and media (technology) is porous, how technology is reflection of humanity.
The samples could reflect the incidental nature of human interaction and the content shows a contrast between social circumstances, that between the affluence of the golfers and the poverty of the woman.
Then again, who the hell knows?
The speaking near the end is in Japanese. As far as I can tell, the man is talking about the prices of something...
The speaking near the end is in Japanese. As far as I can tell, the man is talking about the prices of something...
I love this song.
I love this song.
I SWEAR I've heard that before, I just don't know where. It really creeped me out for a while, though.
I SWEAR I've heard that before, I just don't know where. It really creeped me out for a while, though.
The chinese part at the end, I mean...
The chinese part at the end, I mean...
We worry about the things we care about
anybody have any idea where that long sample of that woman is from, or perhaps they just created it for the song?
I'm sure the woman in the clip is a woman named Harriet, and she was being recorded as part of a linguistics study of people with different accents. I can't remember the researcher's name, but Harriet was being recorded without being told that it was for a study specifically for linguistics, so she was not inhibited. I know this because the story was on an NPR show called Lost & Found Sound (I think). Coincidentally, I had sampled her for one of my own songs. I didn't recognize the clip used in the song, so they must not have gotten...
I'm sure the woman in the clip is a woman named Harriet, and she was being recorded as part of a linguistics study of people with different accents. I can't remember the researcher's name, but Harriet was being recorded without being told that it was for a study specifically for linguistics, so she was not inhibited. I know this because the story was on an NPR show called Lost & Found Sound (I think). Coincidentally, I had sampled her for one of my own songs. I didn't recognize the clip used in the song, so they must not have gotten the sample from the NPR show, but from the original recordings. I saw the movie Crazy Love, and I definitely would have recognized the clip from the song while watching the movie.
Sorry, I found a link. The researcher was William Labov, and the segment is here. Harriet's part comes on at 8:00. Imagine the part in the clip comes after the part you know in "Enjoy Your Worries..." and it makes sense.
Sorry, I found a link. The researcher was William Labov, and the segment is here. Harriet's part comes on at 8:00. Imagine the part in the clip comes after the part you know in "Enjoy Your Worries..." and it makes sense.
http://www.npr.org/programs/lnfsound/stories/990312.stories.html
http://www.npr.org/programs/lnfsound/stories/990312.stories.html