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Dead American Writers Lyrics

Here's to every time that you rock a boat
Here's to every word that you ever wrote
There were clues but it was never clear
You've got to choose your own way out of here

I could say anything you need, anyone you knew,
Anything you see, anything you say,
Anything you need, anyone you knew, anything you
It would be this it would be this.

I've been waiting for the spark myself,
I've been scrambling in the dark for health
I have read your words a thousand times
All this spark but smashed up love and crime.

I could say anything you need, anyone you see
anything you knew, anything you say
anything you need, anyone you knew, anything you
It would be this, it would be this

I've been choking on the bones and tears.
You are the smoking gun that thrown the years
A broken heart won't get you far enough,
I'll beat up waiting through the tire and rough

I could say anything you need, anyone you see,
anything you knew, anything you say,
anything you need, anyone you knew, anything you
it would be this, it would be this
8 Meanings

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Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

So can anybody tell me why this song is called dead american writers? Where the fuck are their names? :( Still it's a good song.

If every song was a literal translation of the writers thoughts then there would be no reason for a website like this.

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

This song is fantastic! When I think about Dead American Writers (Hawthorne, Twain, Hughes, Thoreau, Fitzgerald, Salinger, Steinbeck, Morrison etc) their canonized works have in common is that they are all revolutionary social criticisms. They each put a mirror up to society and show us through humor, satire, irony and metaphor our follies. In Huck Finn, Mark Twain through Horatian satire attacks the institution of slavery and Christian hypocrisy through a lowly protagonist who in the end chooses to set out for Indian territory rather than become part of a society full of ignorance folly and greed “You've got to choose your own way out of here”. The book was and still is in some places banned, for various reasons because it “rocked the boat.” Steinbeck and Morrison do this through symbolic gestures as well. Each of these writers at one point or another has had their works banned by populations that didn’t like their social critiques.

Let us consider Fitzgerald for a moment and his great American novel, The Great Gatsby. One can’t help to think of the valley of ashes which is supposed to represent the death of the American dream. Wilson who represents the Working class American male is “waiting for a spark” and struggling just to make ends meat while the wealthy are indulging in greed and idleness. This is a classic theme of American Modernity in literature. In the end of the novel Nick, our protagonist in the book certainly leaves the reader with a final image of Gatsby who represents the American dream as “smashed up love and crime.”

Still–the chorus is a mystery to me. I would love to hear some opinions.

My Interpretation

Mercury21, thank you for your thought-provoking interpretation of this incredible song! It means even more to me after reading your educated perspective on it. You actually made me miss my literature classes as an English major in college! ; ) Cheers to all those great writers who "rocked the boat!"

The chorus is what grabbed me right away when I first heard this song on the radio. Then when I learned the title, it made perfect sense to me. I believe what's missing from the lyrics is the word "If.." Maybe it's barely audible in the song, but it...

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

To me, it also seems to be about an aspiring writer who looks up to dead American writers. "I've been waiting for the spark myself" is like he is saying he is waiting for the spark of a really great idea. And the chourus is like he is saying that as a fan of the writers, he knows everything about them, every word of every book, everything about their lives, and the whole song shows this. I heard this song by chance on Waterloo Road, and I've downloaded it and had it on repeat since, it's absolutely beautiful. And it makes me want to read The Great Gatsy yet again =D

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

this is what i got for the last part:

I've been choking on the bones and tears You are the smoking gun that thrown the years A broken heart won't get you far enough I'll be up waiting through the tire and rough

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

I interpreted it as, "You are the smoking gun, the throne, the years."

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

in the album's booklet with lyrics it's: "you are the smoking gun, the throne, the years"

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

great song, one of my favourites

Cover art for Dead American Writers lyrics by Tired Pony

Going to agree with an aspiring writer's dream; however, I feel like the line 'A broken heart won't get you far enough' is referring to the idea that some of the great writers (Fitzgerald in particular) wrote their best works whilst horridly in love rather than in heartbreak.

Couldn't be sure, but.

My Interpretation
 
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